#arc157f. [arc157_f]XY Ladder LCS

[arc157_f]XY Ladder LCS

Problem Statement

You are given strings SS and TT of length NN consisting of X and Y. For each i=1,2,dots,Ni = 1, 2, \\dots, N, you can swap the ii-th character of SS and the ii-th character of TT or choose not to do it. There are 2N2^N pairs of strings that can result from this process, including duplicates. Find the longest string that is a common subsequence (not necessarily contiguous) of one of such pairs. If there are multiple such strings, find the lexicographically smallest of them.

What is a common subsequence? A subsequence of string SS is a string obtained by deleting zero or more characters from SS and concatenating the remaining characters without changing the order. A common subsequence of strings SS and TT is a string that is a subsequence of both SS and TT. (See also Sample Output 1.)

Constraints

  • 1leqNleq501 \\leq N \\leq 50
  • Each of SS and TT is a string of length NN consisting of X and Y.

Input

The input is given from Standard Input in the following format:

NN SS TT

Output

Print the lexicographically smallest of the longest strings that can be a common subsequence of the resulting pair of strings.


Sample Input 1

3
XXX
YYY

Sample Output 1

XY
  • If you swap nothing, the only common subsequence of XXX and YYY is the empty string.
  • If you swap the 11-st characters, the common subsequences of YXX and XYY are the empty string, X, and Y.
  • If you swap the 22-nd characters, the common subsequences of XYX and YXY are the empty string, X, Y, XY, and YX.
  • If you swap the 33-rd characters, the common subsequences of XXY and YYX are the empty string, X and Y.

Doing two or more swaps is equivalent to one of the above after swapping SS and TT themselves. Thus, the longest strings that can be a common subsequence are XY and YX. The lexicographically smaller of them, XY, is the answer.


Sample Input 2

1
X
Y

Sample Output 2


The answer may be the empty string.


Sample Input 3

4
XXYX
YYYY

Sample Output 3

XYY

XYY will be a common subsequence after, for instance, swapping just the 22-nd characters. Any string that is longer or has the same length and is lexicographically smaller will not be a common subsequence after any combination of swaps, so this is the answer.