There is a given list of strings where each string contains only lowercase letters from , inclusive. The set of strings is said to be a GOOD SET if no string is a prefix of another string. In this case, print GOOD SET. Otherwise, print BAD SET on the first line followed by the string being checked.
Note If two strings are identical, they are prefixes of each other.
Example 
     
Here 'abcd' is a prefix of 'abcde' and 'bcd' is a prefix of 'bcde'. Since 'abcde' is tested first, print
BAD SET  
abcde
.
No string is a prefix of another so print
GOOD SET 
Function Description 
Complete the noPrefix function in the editor below.  
noPrefix has the following parameter(s): 
- string words[n]: an array of strings  
Prints 
-   string(s): either GOOD SET or BAD SET on one line followed by the word on the next line.  No return value is expected.  
Input Format 
First line contains , the size of . 
Then next  lines each contain a string, .   
Constraints 
 
 the length of words[i]  
All letters in  are in the range 'a' through 'j', inclusive.    
Sample Input00
STDIN       Function
-----       --------
7            words[] size n = 7
aab          words = ['aab', 'defgab', 'abcde', 'aabcde', 'bbbbbbbbbb', 'jabjjjad']
defgab  
abcde
aabcde
cedaaa
bbbbbbbbbb
jabjjjad
Sample Output00
BAD SET
aabcde
Explanation 
'aab' is prefix of 'aabcde' so it is a BAD SET and fails at string 'aabcde'.  
Sample Input01
4
aab
aac
aacghgh
aabghgh
Sample Output01
BAD SET
aacghgh
Explanation 
'aab' is a prefix of 'aabghgh', and aac' is prefix of 'aacghgh'. The set is a BAD SET.   'aacghgh' is tested before 'aabghgh', so and it fails at 'aacghgh'.