British scientists have compiled a list of holders of the title
“the oldest person currently alive.” For each of the long-livers,
this list contains their date of birth and the period during which they were
the oldest person alive in the world. Unfortunately, the list does not mention
which of the long-livers lived the longest life, but it is not so difficult
to determine such a person by the given data.
Input
The first line contains the number n of
long-livers in the list (1 ≤ n ≤ 100). The list is given in the
following n lines in the form of triples of dates d1,
d2, d3, where d1 is the
date of birth of a long-liver, d2 is the date starting from
which this person was the oldest person alive in the world, and
d3 is the date of death of this person. All the dates are
given in the format “dd.mm.yyyy” and lie in the range from
01.01.1800 to 31.12.2009 (the British scientists use the Gregorian calendar).
The dates in one line are separated by exactly one space. It is known that the
date d2 is always greater than the date d1,
and d3 is greater than d2. The date
d2 always coincides with the date d3 from
the preceding line of the list. All the dates of birth and all the dates of
death are different.
Output
Output the number of the long-liver from the list who lived longer than the
others. The lifetime should be measured in days, including both the day of
birth and the day of death. The number of the long-liver must lie in the range
from 1 to n. If there are several long-livers holding the record, output
the number of the person who died earlier.
Sample
input | output |
---|
4
10.10.1873 27.12.1987 11.01.1988
18.11.1874 11.01.1988 14.02.1991
21.02.1875 14.02.1991 04.08.1997
29.08.1880 04.08.1997 16.04.1998
| 3 |
Notes
In the Gregorian calendar,
the length of a non-leap year is 365 days and the length of a leap year
is 366 days. Whether a year is a leap year is determined by the following rule:
- A year with a number divisible by 4 is a leap year.
- Further, a year with a number divisible by 100 is, by way of exception, a non-leap year.
- Further, a year with a number divisible by 400 is still a leap year.
Problem Author: Alexander Ipatov
Problem Source: XI USU Open Personal Contest (March 13, 2010)