COCI 2006/2007, Contest #1

Task DEBUG

While debugging a program Mirko noticed that a bug in the program may be linked with the existence of so called square killers in the program memory. The program memory is a matrix composed of R rows and C columns consisting only of zeroes and ones. A square killer is a square submatrix in memory, consisting of more than one character, that, when rotated 180 degrees looks exactly the same. For example, the following matrix contains 3 square killers:

101010
111001
101001

memory

....10
....01
......

killer

......
...00.
...00.

killer

101...
111...
101...

killer

Mirko is wondering if there is a connection between the size of the largest square killer and the bug in the program. Help Mirko by writing a program that, given the layout of the memory, outputs the size of the largest square killer. The size of the square killer is the number of rows (or columns) that the killer consists of. In the example above the killer sizes are 2, 2 and 3, respectively.

Input

The first will contain two integers, R and C, smaller than or equal to 300.

The next R lines will each contain C characters ('0' or '1') with no spaces.

Output

Output the size of the largest killer on a single line, or output -1 if there are no square killers.

Sample Tests

Input

3 6
101010
111001
101001

Output

3

Input

4 5
10010
01010
10101
01001

Output

3

Input

3 3
101
111
100

Output

-1

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Best Solutions


Point Value: 20 (partial)
Time Limit: 1.00s
Memory Limit: 32M
Added: Jan 13, 2009

Languages Allowed:
C++03, PAS, C, HASK, ASM, RUBY, PYTH2, JAVA, PHP, SCM, CAML, PERL, C#, C++11, PYTH3

Comments (Search)

Is the time limit too strict?

Also, 300^3 = 2.7e7, which should run within a second.

The grids do not respect the dimensions stated.