2000 LSU Computer Science High School Programming Contest
Veteran Problem 10: Rare Order

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A rare book collector recently discovered a book written in an unfamiliar language that used the same characters as the English language. The book contained a short index, but the ordering of the items in the index was different from what one would expect if the characters were ordered the same way as in the English alphabet. The collector tried to use the index to determine the ordering of characters (i.e., the collating sequence) of the strange alphabet, then gave up with frustration at the tedium of the task.

You are to write a program to complete the collector's work. In particular, your program will take a set of strings that has been sorted according to a particular collating sequence and determine what that sequence is.

Input

The input consists of an ordered list of strings of lowercase letters, one string per line. Each string contains at most 5 characters. The end of the list is signalled by a line with the single character `#'. No more than 10 lines will be in the list. Not all letters are necessarily used, but the list will imply a complete ordering among those letters that are used.

Output

Your output should be a single line containing lowercase letters in the order that specifies the collating sequence used to produce the input data file.

Sample Input

xwy
zx
zxy
zxw
ywwx
#

Sample Output

xzyw



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© 2000 LSU Computer Science High School Programming Contest

This page last updated 2001/04/05 20:29:47.