#P1269A. Equation

Equation

Description

Let's call a positive integer composite if it has at least one divisor other than $1$ and itself. For example:

  • the following numbers are composite: $1024$, $4$, $6$, $9$;
  • the following numbers are not composite: $13$, $1$, $2$, $3$, $37$.

You are given a positive integer $n$. Find two composite integers $a,b$ such that $a-b=n$.

It can be proven that solution always exists.

The input contains one integer $n$ ($1 \leq n \leq 10^7$): the given integer.

Print two composite integers $a,b$ ($2 \leq a, b \leq 10^9, a-b=n$).

It can be proven, that solution always exists.

If there are several possible solutions, you can print any.

Input

The input contains one integer $n$ ($1 \leq n \leq 10^7$): the given integer.

Output

Print two composite integers $a,b$ ($2 \leq a, b \leq 10^9, a-b=n$).

It can be proven, that solution always exists.

If there are several possible solutions, you can print any.

Samples

1
9 8
512
4608 4096