There was no limit to Jack's joy! He managed to buy on the Internet tickets to
the ICPC semifinal contest, which was to be held very soon in the mysterious
overseas city of Saint Petersburg. Now he was going to have a transoceanic
flight in the world largest passenger aircraft Airbus A380.
Jack started studying the aircraft seating chart in Wikipedia,
so that he would be able to ask for a nice window seat at
check-in. Or maybe he would ask for an aisle seat—he hadn't decided yet.
Airbus A380 has two decks with passenger seats.
The upper deck is for premium and business class
passengers. The premium class section embraces the first and second rows. Each
row contains four seats identified by letters from A to D. The aisles
in this section are between the first and second seats and between the third
and fourth seats of each row. The rows from the third to the twentieth are for
business class passengers. There are six seats in each row, and they are
identified by letters from A to F. The aisles are between the second
and third and between the fourth and fifth seats of each row.
The lower deck is reserved for economy class passengers. The rows are numbered
from 21 to 65. Each row contains ten seats identified by letters from A
to K (the letter I is omitted). The aisles are between the third and
fourth seats and between the seventh and eighth seats of each row.
Help Jack determine if a seat is next to the window or next to the aisle given
the seat designation.
Input
The only line contains a seat designation: the row number and the letter
identifying the position of the seat in the row.
Output
If the seat is next to the window, output “window”. Otherwise, if the seat is
next to the aisle, output “aisle”. If neither is true, output “neither”.
Samples
input | output |
---|
3C
| aisle
|
64A
| window
|
21F
| neither
|
Problem Author: Denis Dublennykh
Problem Source: NEERC 2011, Eastern subregional contest