Problem Description
The h-index of an author is the largest h where he has at least h papers with citations not less than h.
Bobo has no papers and he is going to publish some subsequently.
If he works on a paper for x hours, the paper will get (a⋅x) citations, where a is a known constant.
It's clear that x should be a positive integer.
There is also a trick -- one can cite his own papers published earlier.
Given Bobo has n working hours, find the maximum h-index of him.
Input
The input consists of several test cases and is terminated by end-of-file.
Each test case contains two integers n and a.Output
For each test case, print an integer which denotes the maximum h-index.
## Constraint
* 1≤n≤109
* 0≤a≤n
* The number of test cases does not exceed 104.Sample Input
3 0 3 1 1000000000 1000000000
Sample Output
1 2 1000000000
Hint
For the first sample, Bobo can work 3 papers for 1 hour each.
With the trick mentioned, he will get papers with citations 2,1,0. Thus, his h-index is 1.
For the second sample, Bobo can work 2 papers for 1 and 2 hours respectively. He will get papers with citations 1+1,2+0. Thus, his h-index is 2.
#include<cstdio>
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int n,m;
while(cin>>n>>m)
{
cout<<(n+m>>1)<<endl;
}
}