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Problems

Automated Telephone Exchange

Automated Telephone Exchange

Time limit 1 second
Memory limit 128 MiB

In St Petersburg phone numbers are formatted as "XXX-XX-XX", where the first three digits represent index of the Automated Telephone Exchange (ATE). Each ATE has exactly 10000 unique phone numbers.

Peter has just bought a new flat and now he wants to install a telephone line. He thinks that a phone number is lucky if the arithmetic expression represented by that phone number is equal to zero. For example, the phone number 102-40-62 is lucky (102 - 40 - 62 = 0), and the number 157-10-47 is not lucky (157 - 10 - 47 = 1000).

Peter knows the index of the ATE that serves his house. To get an idea of his chances to get a lucky number he wants to know how many lucky numbers his ATE has.

Input data

Contains a single integer number n - the index of Peter's ATE (100n999).

Output data

Output a single integer number - the number of lucky phone numbers Peter's ATE has.

Examples

Input example #1
196
Output example #1
3
Author Egor Kulikov
Source 2011 ACM NEERC, Northern Subregional Contest, St Petersburg, October 29, Problem A