IBM has decided that all messages sent to and from teams competing in the ACM programming contest should be encoded. They have decided that instead of sending the letters of a message, they will transmit their remainders relative to some secret keys which are four, two-digit integers that are pairwise relatively prime. For example, consider the message "THE CAT IN THE HAT". The letters of this message are first converted into numeric equivalents, where A=01, B=02, ..., Z=26 and a blank=27. Each group of 3 letters is then combined to create a 6 digit number. (If the last group does not contain 3 letters it is padded on the right with blanks and then transformed into a 6 digit number.) For example
THE CAT IN THE HAT → 200805 270301 202709 142720 080527 080120
Each six-digit integer is then encoded by replacing it with the remainders modulo the secret keys as follows: Each remainder should be padded with leading 0’s, if necessary, to make it two digits long. After this, the remainders are concatenated together and then any leading 0’s are removed. For example, if the secret keys are 34, 81, 65, and 43, then the first integer 200805 would have remainders 1, 6, 20 and 38. Following the rules above, these combine to get the encoding 1062038. The entire sample message above would be encoded as
1062038 1043103 1473907 22794503 15135731 16114011