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USU Junior Championship March'2005

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J. Something Easier

Time limit: 1.0 second
Memory limit: 64 MB
“How do physicists define prime numbers? Very easily: prime numbers are the number 2 and all the odd numbers greater than 2. They may show that this definition corresponds to the mathematical one: 3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime… 9? 9 is certainly not prime. Then: 11 is prime, 13 is prime. So 9 is the experiment mistake.”
From mathematical analysis course
Once physicist and mathematician argued how many prime numbers one needed for the purpose that their sum was equal to N. One said that it wasn’t known and the other that 3 was always enough. The question is how many.

Input

The first line contains T, an amount of tests. Then T lines with integer N follow (0 ≤ T ≤ 20; 2 ≤ N ≤ 109).

Output

For each test in a separate line you should output prime numbers so that their sum equals to N. An amount of such prime numbers is to be minimal possible.

Sample

inputoutput
7
2
27
85
192
14983
3
7
2
23 2 2
2 83
11 181
14983
3
7
Problem Author: Aleksandr Bikbaev
Problem Source: USU Junior Championship March'2005
To submit the solution for this problem go to the Problem set: 1356. Something Easier