#P109E. Lucky Interval

Lucky Interval

Description

Petya loves lucky numbers. We all know that lucky numbers are the positive integers whose decimal representations contain only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not.

One day Petya came across an interval of numbers [a, a + l - 1]. Let F(x) be the number of lucky digits of number x. Find the minimum b (a < b) such, that F(a) = F(b), F(a + 1) = F(b + 1), ..., F(a + l - 1) = F(b + l - 1).

The single line contains two integers a and l (1 ≤ a, l ≤ 109) — the interval's first number and the interval's length correspondingly.

On the single line print number b — the answer to the problem.

Input

The single line contains two integers a and l (1 ≤ a, l ≤ 109) — the interval's first number and the interval's length correspondingly.

Output

On the single line print number b — the answer to the problem.

Samples

7 4

17

4 7

14

Note

Consider that [a, b] denotes an interval of integers; this interval includes the boundaries. That is,