CF483A Counterexample
Description
Your friend has recently learned about coprime numbers. A pair of numbers $ {a,b} $ is called coprime if the maximum number that divides both $ a $ and $ b $ is equal to one.
Your friend often comes up with different statements. He has recently supposed that if the pair $ (a,b) $ is coprime and the pair $ (b,c) $ is coprime, then the pair $ (a,c) $ is coprime.
You want to find a counterexample for your friend's statement. Therefore, your task is to find three distinct numbers $ (a,b,c) $ , for which the statement is false, and the numbers meet the condition $ l
Input Format
The single line contains two positive space-separated integers $ l $ , $ r $ ( $ 1
Output Format
Print three positive space-separated integers $ a $ , $ b $ , $ c $ — three distinct numbers $ (a,b,c) $ that form the counterexample. If there are several solutions, you are allowed to print any of them. The numbers must be printed in ascending order.
If the counterexample does not exist, print the single number -1.
Explanation/Hint
In the first sample pair $ (2,4) $ is not coprime and pairs $ (2,3) $ and $ (3,4) $ are.
In the second sample you cannot form a group of three distinct integers, so the answer is -1.
In the third sample it is easy to see that numbers $ 900000000000000009 $ and $ 900000000000000021 $ are divisible by three.