UFPT2015J - Palindrometer

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While driving the other day, John looked down at his odometer, and it read 100000. John was pretty excited about that. But, just one mile further, the odometer read 100001, and John was REALLY excited! You see, John loves palindromes – things that read the same way forwards and backwards. So, given any odometer reading, what is the least number of miles John must drive before the odometer reading is a palindrome? For John, every odometer digit counts. If the odometer reading was 000121, he wouldn't consider that a palindrome.

Input

There will be several test cases in the input. Each test case will consist of an odometer reading on its own line. Each odometer reading will be from 2 to 9 digits long. The odometer in question has the number of digits given in the input - so, if the input is 00456, the odometer has 5 digits. There will be no spaces in the input, and no blank lines between input sets. The input will end with a line with a single 0.

Output

For each test case, output the minimum number of miles John must drive before the odometer reading is a palindrome. This may be 0 if the number is already a palindrome. Output each integer on its own line, with no extra spaces and no blank lines between outputs.

Example

Input:
100000
100001
000121
00456
0

Output:
1
0
979
44


Added by:Cormac
Date:2015-09-20
Time limit:1s
Source limit:50000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All except: ASM64 GOSU JS-MONKEY
Resource:2010 ACM ICPC Southeast Regional Programming Contest