We will work with a basic time unit of an eighth-note. At any given time, your left foot and right foot will each be on distinct arrows. Only one foot may perform an action (changing arrows and/or tapping) during any time unit; jumping is not allowed. Also, you must remain facing forward in order to see the screen. This puts limitations on which feet you can use to hit which arrows. Finally, hitting two arrows in a row with the same foot ("double-tapping") is exhausting, because you can't shift your weight onto that foot. Ideally, you want to alternate feet all the way through a string of consecutive arrows.
Performing an action with a foot costs 1 unit of energy if it did NOT perform an action in the previous time unit. If it did, then it costs 3 units if it doesn't change arrows, 5 units if it moves to an adjacent arrow, and 7 units if it moves directly across the pad (between Up and Down, or Left and Right).
Under normal circumstances, you can't put your left foot on Right, or your right foot on Left. However, you CAN do a temporary "crossover": if your left foot is on Up or Down, you can twist your hips and put your right foot on Left - but until your right foot moves away, you can't move your left to a different arrow. (Imagine the tangle your legs would get into if you tried!) Similarly, you can cross your left foot over/behind your right.
There are at most 100 sequences. Input is terminated by a line consisting of a single #.
LRLRLLLLRLRLRRRRLLRRLRLDU...D...UUUUDDDD #
LRLRLLLLRLRLRRRRLLRRLRLRL...R...LLLLRRRR