#P641D. Little Artem and Random Variable

    ID: 3489 Type: RemoteJudge 2000ms 256MiB Tried: 0 Accepted: 0 Difficulty: (None) Uploaded By: Tags>dpimplementationmathprobabilities*2400

Little Artem and Random Variable

No submission language available for this problem.

Description

Little Artyom decided to study probability theory. He found a book with a lot of nice exercises and now wants you to help him with one of them.

Consider two dices. When thrown each dice shows some integer from 1 to n inclusive. For each dice the probability of each outcome is given (of course, their sum is 1), and different dices may have different probability distributions.

We throw both dices simultaneously and then calculate values max(a, b) and min(a, b), where a is equal to the outcome of the first dice, while b is equal to the outcome of the second dice. You don't know the probability distributions for particular values on each dice, but you know the probability distributions for max(a, b) and min(a, b). That is, for each x from 1 to n you know the probability that max(a, b) would be equal to x and the probability that min(a, b) would be equal to x. Find any valid probability distribution for values on the dices. It's guaranteed that the input data is consistent, that is, at least one solution exists.

First line contains the integer n (1 ≤ n ≤ 100 000) — the number of different values for both dices.

Second line contains an array consisting of n real values with up to 8 digits after the decimal point  — probability distribution for max(a, b), the i-th of these values equals to the probability that max(a, b) = i. It's guaranteed that the sum of these values for one dice is 1. The third line contains the description of the distribution min(a, b) in the same format.

Output two descriptions of the probability distribution for a on the first line and for b on the second line.

The answer will be considered correct if each value of max(a, b) and min(a, b) probability distribution values does not differ by more than 10 - 6 from ones given in input. Also, probabilities should be non-negative and their sums should differ from 1 by no more than 10 - 6.

Input

First line contains the integer n (1 ≤ n ≤ 100 000) — the number of different values for both dices.

Second line contains an array consisting of n real values with up to 8 digits after the decimal point  — probability distribution for max(a, b), the i-th of these values equals to the probability that max(a, b) = i. It's guaranteed that the sum of these values for one dice is 1. The third line contains the description of the distribution min(a, b) in the same format.

Output

Output two descriptions of the probability distribution for a on the first line and for b on the second line.

The answer will be considered correct if each value of max(a, b) and min(a, b) probability distribution values does not differ by more than 10 - 6 from ones given in input. Also, probabilities should be non-negative and their sums should differ from 1 by no more than 10 - 6.

Samples

2
0.25 0.75
0.75 0.25

0.5 0.5 
0.5 0.5 

3
0.125 0.25 0.625
0.625 0.25 0.125

0.25 0.25 0.5 
0.5 0.25 0.25