A tree (i.e. a connected graph without cycles) with vertices numbered by the integers 1, 2, ..., n is given. The "Prufer" code of such a tree is built as follows: the leaf (a vertex that is incident to only one edge) with the minimal number is taken. This leaf, together with its incident edge is removed from the graph, while the number of the vertex that was adjacent to the leaf is written down. In the obtained graph, this procedure is repeated, until there is only one vertex left (which, by the way, always has number n). The written down sequence of n-1 numbers is called the Prufer code of the tree.
Your task is, given a tree, to compute its Prufer code. The tree is denoted by a word of the language specified by the following grammar:
T ::= "(" N S ")"
S ::= " " T S
| empty
N ::= number
The input contains several test cases. Each test case specifies a tree as described above on one line of the input file. Input is terminated by EOF. You may assume that 1<=n<=50.
For each test case generate a single line containing the Prufer code of the specified tree. Separate numbers by a single space. Do not print any spaces at the end of the line.
(2 (6 (7)) (3) (5 (1) (4)) (8)) (1 (2 (3))) (6 (1 (4)) (2 (3) (5)))
5 2 5 2 6 2 8 2 3 2 1 6 2 6