The new operating system BerOS has a nice feature. It is possible to use any number of characters '/' as a delimiter in path instead of one traditional '/'. For example, strings //usr///local//nginx/sbin// and /usr/local/nginx///sbin are equivalent. The character '/' (or some sequence of such characters) at the end of the path is required only in case of the path to the root directory, which can be represented as single character '/'.
A path called normalized if it contains the smallest possible number of characters '/'.
Your task is to transform a given path to the normalized form.
The first line of the input contains only lowercase Latin letters and character '/' — the path to some directory. All paths start with at least one character '/'. The length of the given line is no more than 100 characters, it is not empty.
The path in normalized form.
//usr///local//nginx/sbin
/usr/local/nginx/sbin
import java.util.Scanner;
public class Main{
public static void main(String[] args){
int i,j=0;
Scanner scan=new Scanner(System.in);
//char[] s=scan.next().toCharArray();
//String s=new String();
String s;
String b="";
s=scan.next();
int n=s.length();
for(i=0;i<n;i++){
if(s.charAt(i)=='/'&&s.charAt(i+1)=='/'){
continue;
//b+=s.charAt(i);
}
b+=s.charAt(i);
}
System.out.print(b);
}}