Ancient Roman empire had a strong government system with various departments, including a secret
service department. Important documents were sent between provinces and the capital in encrypted form
to prevent eavesdropping. The most popular ciphers in those times were so called substitution cipher and
permutation cipher.
Substitution cipher changes all occurrences of each letter to some other letter. Substitutes for all letters
must be different. For some letters substitute letter may coincide with the original letter. For example,
applying substitution cipher that changes all letters from 'A' to 'Y' to the next ones in the alphabet, and
changes 'Z' to 'A', to the message "VICTORIOUS" one gets the message "WJDUPSJPVT".
Permutation cipher applies some permutation to the letters of the message. For example, applying the
permutation h2, 1, 5, 4, 3, 7, 6, 10, 9, 8i to the message "VICTORIOUS" one gets the message "IVOTCIRSUO".
It was quickly noticed that being applied separately, both substitution cipher and permutation cipher
were rather weak. But when being combined, they were strong enough for those times. Thus, the most
important messages were first encrypted using substitution cipher, and then the result was encrypted
using permutation cipher. Encrypting the message "VICTORIOUS" with the combination of the ciphers
described above one gets the message "JWPUDJSTVP".
Archeologists have recently found the message engraved on a stone plate. At the first glance it seemed
completely meaningless, so it was suggested that the message was encrypted with some substitution and
permutation ciphers. They have conjectured the possible text of the original message that was encrypted,
and now they want to check their conjecture. They need a computer program to do it, so you have to
write one.
Input
Input file contains two lines. The first line contains the message engraved on the plate. Before encrypting,
all spaces and punctuation marks were removed, so the encrypted message contains only capital letters of
the English alphabet. The second line contains the original message that is conjectured to be encrypted
in the message on the first line. It also contains only capital letters of the English alphabet.
The lengths of both lines of the input file are equal and do not exceed 100.
Output
Output "YES" if the message on the first line of the input file could be the result of encrypting the message
on the second line, or "NO" in the other case.
Samples
Input | Output |
JWPUDJSTVP VICTORIOUS | YES |
MAMA ROME | NO |
HAHA HEHE | YES |
AAA AAA | YES |
NEERCISTHEBEST SECRETMESSAGES | NO |
|