VIM is a great text editor for unix systems, but it's notorious for being difficult to exit. Write a full program that will output `:q` to exit VIM. It should then read a single line of input, as it will then either be given a bash prompt, in which case the exit was successful, or an error, in which case there are unsaved changes. The bash prompt looks like this: E37@vimmachine: /var/override) While the error looks like this: E37: No write since last change (add ! to override) Upon being given the bash prompt, the program's work is done, and it may terminate. Upon being given the error, your program should randomly (ie each possibility has a non-zero probability of being chosen) output `:q!`, to exit without saving, or `:x`, to save and exit. This is [tag:code-golf] so fewest bytes **in each language** wins!