You have devised a new encryption technique which encodes a message by inserting between its charactersrandomly generated strings in a clever way. Because of pending patent issues we will not discuss indetail how the strings are generated and inserted into the original message. To validate your method,however, it is necessary to write a program that checks if the message is really encoded in the finalstring.Given two strings s and t, you have to decide whether s is a subsequence of t, i.e. if you can removecharacters from t such that the concatenation of the remaining characters is s.InputThe input contains several testcases. Each is specified by two strings s, t of alphanumeric ASCIIcharacters separated by whitespace. Input is terminated by EOF.OutputFor each test case output, if s is a subsequence of t.Sample Inputsequence subsequenceperson compressionVERDI vivaVittorioEmanueleReDiItaliacaseDoesMatter CaseDoesMatterSample OutputYesNoYesNo
#include <iostream>
#include<cstdio>
#include<cstring>
#include<string.h>
#include<string>
#include<stdio.h>
#include<algorithm>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
char s1[1000001];
char s2[1000001];
int i,j;
while(scanf("%s%s",s1,s2)!=EOF)
{
int l=strlen(s1);
j=l-1;
for(i=strlen(s2)-1; i>=0; i--)
{
if(s2[i]==s1[j])
j--;
}
if(j==-1)
printf("Yes\n");
else
printf("No\n");
}
return 0;
}