Ancient Greeks and Romans thought that gods of the underworld like even
numbers, and the gods who protect the ones who were alive like odd ones.
In 123 B.C., Rome was threatened by the war with Parthian Empire.
The emperor Adrian did not want the bloodshed; therefore he went to carry
the negotiation with parthians.
In order get the gift of great eloquence from the gods,
he wanted to sacrifice a herd of n sheep.
Of course, n was an odd number.
Thinking about that, Adrian realised that he should give the equal number
of sheep as a sacrifice to each of the gods.
Otherwise, a god who gets less sheep than some other god becomes furious at
Adrian, and this might prevent him to solve the problem in the peaceful way.
The emperor called for Theon of Smyrna, the mathematician, and ordered him
to divide sheep equally.
Theon of Smyrna was also superstitious, that's why he thought
that the amount of gods not only should be odd,
but also should have odd amount of positive divisors.
Apparently, he was able to solve the problem and negotiations
with Parthia finished successfully.
Can you solve this problem?
Input
The only line contains an integer odd number n that is a total amount of
sheep to sacrifice (1 ≤ n ≤ 1018 − 1).
Output
Output the number of gods to receive a sacrifice. If this problem has several
answers, output the maximal one.
Sample
Problem Author: Grigoriy Nazarov
Problem Source: Ural SU Team.GOV Contest. Petrozavodsk Summer Session, August 2011