CTRICK - Card Trick

The magician shuffles a small pack of cards, holds it face down and performs the following procedure:

  1. The top card is moved to the bottom of the pack. The new top card is dealt face up onto the table. It is the Ace of Spades.
  2. Two cards are moved one at a time from the top to the bottom. The next card is dealt face up onto the table. It is the Two of Spades.
  3. Three cards are moved one at a time…
  4. This goes on until the nth and last card turns out to be the n of Spades.

This impressive trick works if the magician knows how to arrange the cards beforehand (and knows how to give a false shuffle). Your program has to determine the initial order of the cards for a given number of cards, 1 ≤ n ≤ 20000.

Input

On the first line of the input is a single positive integer, telling the number of test cases to follow. Each case consists of one line containing the integer n.

Output

For each test case, output a line with the correct permutation of the values 1 to n, space separated. The first number showing the top card of the pack, etc…

Example

Input:
2
4
5

Output:
2 1 4 3
3 1 4 5 2

Added by:Camilo Andrés Varela León
Date:2006-11-23
Time limit:3.279s
Source limit:50000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All except: ERL JS-RHINO NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET
Resource:Nordic Collegiate Contest 2006

hide comments
2016-08-01 21:46:31
Am i only who didn't understand whats happening actually. -_-
2016-06-29 13:17:05
Did using queue in o(n^2) time AC
2016-05-27 14:19:51
AC in 0.45 by n^2 logic!
2016-05-22 08:32:27 Kshitij Korde
If c++ list is used, use splice function for speeding up. (Removing first n element and appending it at the end). Iteration times out.
2016-03-22 03:58:39 hardik agrawal
wonder how!! but got AC in 1.74 using n^2 solution..
2016-01-25 11:10:50 GAURAV CHANDEL
You Beauty -- BIT...
2015-10-08 10:14:52 A@$H!K
My first proper BIT! :D
2015-08-30 15:57:22
0.98s with a cyclic list. FAIL
2015-07-23 10:22:51 sHaShAnK sHeKhAr
How can we prove that such configuration of cards will always exist for all values of n??
2015-07-10 09:15:31


Last edit: 2016-07-31 16:21:52
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