ADDMUL - To Add or to Multiply

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The Industrial Computer Processor Company offers very fast, special purpose processing units tailored to customer needs. Processors of the a-C-m family (such as the 1-C-2 and the 5-C-3) have an instruction set with only two different operations:

A add a

M multiply by m

The processor receives an integer, executes a sequence of A and M operations (the program) that modifies the input, and outputs the result. For example, the 1-C-2 processor executing the program AAAM with the input 2 yields the output 10 (the computation is 2 → 3 → 4 → 5 → 10), while the 5-C-3 processor yields 51 with the same program and input (2→ 7 → 12 → 17 → 51).

You are an a-C-m programmer assigned to a top secret project. This means that you have not been told the precise computation your program should perform. But you are given particular values p, q, r, and s and the following conditions:

1. The input is guaranteed to be a number between p and q.

2. The output must be some number between r and s.

Given an a-C-m processor and the numbers p, q, r, and s, your job is to construct the shortest a-C-m program which, for every input x such that pxq, yields some output y such that rys. If there is more than one program of minimum length, choose the one that come first lexicographically, treating each program as a string of As and Ms.

Input

The input contains several test cases. Each test case is given by a line with the six integers a, m, p, q, r, and s as described above (1 ≤ a, m, p, q, r, s ≤ 109, pq and rs).

The last test case is followed by a line with six zeros.

Output

For each test case, display its case number followed by the best program as described above. Display the word “empty” if the best program uses no operations. Display the word “impossible” if there is no program meeting the specifications.

Display the program as a sequence of space-separated strings, alternating between strings of the form “nA” and strings of the form “nM”, where n > 0. Strings of the former type indicate n consecutive A operations, and strings of the latter type indicate n consecutive M operations.

Follow the format of the sample output.

Example

Input:
1 2 2 3 10 20
1 3 2 3 22 33
3 2 2 3 4 5
5 3 2 3 2 3
0 0 0 0 0 0
Output: Case 1: 1A 2M
Case 2: 1M 2A 1M
Case 3: impossible
Case 4: empty


Added by:John Mario
Date:2011-08-24
Time limit:0.100s
Source limit:50000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All except: ASM64 BF WHITESPACE
Resource:ACM ICPC 2011 World Finals