Correct Solution?

One cold winter evening Alice and her older brother Bob was sitting at home near the fireplace and giving each other interesting problems to solve. When it was Alice's turn, she told the number n to Bob and said:

—Shuffle the digits in this number in order to obtain the smallest possible number without leading zeroes.

—No problem! — said Bob and immediately gave her an answer.

Alice said a random number, so she doesn't know whether Bob's answer is correct. Help her to find this out, because impatient brother is waiting for the verdict.

Input

The first line contains one integer n (0 ≤ n ≤ 109) without leading zeroes. The second lines contains one integer m (0 ≤ m ≤ 109) — Bob's answer, possibly with leading zeroes.

Output

Print OK if Bob's answer is correct and WRONG_ANSWER otherwise.

Examples

Input
3310
1033
Output
OK
Input
4
5
Output
WRONG_ANSWER 
minimal and the number of groups, the second group of atoms required number of the first group consisting of the first bit number is not 0;
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
const int maxn=1e7;
char a[maxn],b[maxn];
int main()
{
    int k=0;
    scanf("%s%s",a,b);
    char t;
    int len=strlen(a);
    sort(a,a+len);
    if((a[0]-'0')!=0)
    {
        if(strcmp(a,b)==0)
          cout<<"OK"<<endl;
        else
          cout<<"WRONG_ANSWER"<<endl;
    }
    if((a[0]-'0')==0)
    {
        for(int i=0;i<len;i++)
        {
            if((a[i]-'0')!=0)
            {
                k=i;
                break;
            }
        }
        t=a[0];a[0]=a[k];a[k]=t;
        if(strcmp(a,b)==0)
          cout<<"OK"<<endl;
        else
          cout<<"WRONG_ANSWER"<<endl;
    }
    return 0;          
} 

 

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Origin www.cnblogs.com/ylrwj/p/11014276.html