#P661G. Hungarian Notation

Hungarian Notation

Description

In Hungarian notation, a variable name is prefixed with a letter or a group of letters which are mnemonics for the type of that variable. For the purposes of this problem we will consider only two data types: integer and real.

You are given the meaningful part of variable name in lowercase and a sample value that it will store. Integer values will be written as a sequence of digits. Real values will be written using fixed-point notation: the value is represented with a mandatory decimal point, one or more digits in the decimal part and without exponent part.

Your task is to construct a name of this variable in Hungarian notation in the following way. Convert the first letter of meaningful part of the name to uppercase, and prepend a prefix: 'i' for integer variables and 'f' for real ones.

The first line of the input contains a string of lowercase letters of English alphabet. The length of the string will be between 1 and 10, inclusive.

The second line of the input contains a string of digits and zero or one decimal point '.'. The length of the string will be between 1 and 11, inclusive. It's guaranteed that the decimal point '.' will not be the last character of the string.

Output a single string — the name of the variable in Hungarian notation.

Input

The first line of the input contains a string of lowercase letters of English alphabet. The length of the string will be between 1 and 10, inclusive.

The second line of the input contains a string of digits and zero or one decimal point '.'. The length of the string will be between 1 and 11, inclusive. It's guaranteed that the decimal point '.' will not be the last character of the string.

Output

Output a single string — the name of the variable in Hungarian notation.

Samples

count
18

iCount

weight
3.95

fWeight