#P999E. Reachability from the Capital

Reachability from the Capital

Description

There are $n$ cities and $m$ roads in Berland. Each road connects a pair of cities. The roads in Berland are one-way.

What is the minimum number of new roads that need to be built to make all the cities reachable from the capital?

New roads will also be one-way.

The first line of input consists of three integers $n$, $m$ and $s$ ($1 \le n \le 5000, 0 \le m \le 5000, 1 \le s \le n$) — the number of cities, the number of roads and the index of the capital. Cities are indexed from $1$ to $n$.

The following $m$ lines contain roads: road $i$ is given as a pair of cities $u_i$, $v_i$ ($1 \le u_i, v_i \le n$, $u_i \ne v_i$). For each pair of cities $(u, v)$, there can be at most one road from $u$ to $v$. Roads in opposite directions between a pair of cities are allowed (i.e. from $u$ to $v$ and from $v$ to $u$).

Print one integer — the minimum number of extra roads needed to make all the cities reachable from city $s$. If all the cities are already reachable from $s$, print 0.

Input

The first line of input consists of three integers $n$, $m$ and $s$ ($1 \le n \le 5000, 0 \le m \le 5000, 1 \le s \le n$) — the number of cities, the number of roads and the index of the capital. Cities are indexed from $1$ to $n$.

The following $m$ lines contain roads: road $i$ is given as a pair of cities $u_i$, $v_i$ ($1 \le u_i, v_i \le n$, $u_i \ne v_i$). For each pair of cities $(u, v)$, there can be at most one road from $u$ to $v$. Roads in opposite directions between a pair of cities are allowed (i.e. from $u$ to $v$ and from $v$ to $u$).

Output

Print one integer — the minimum number of extra roads needed to make all the cities reachable from city $s$. If all the cities are already reachable from $s$, print 0.

Samples

9 9 1
1 2
1 3
2 3
1 5
5 6
6 1
1 8
9 8
7 1

3

5 4 5
1 2
2 3
3 4
4 1

1

Note

The first example is illustrated by the following:

For example, you can add roads ($6, 4$), ($7, 9$), ($1, 7$) to make all the cities reachable from $s = 1$.

The second example is illustrated by the following:

In this example, you can add any one of the roads ($5, 1$), ($5, 2$), ($5, 3$), ($5, 4$) to make all the cities reachable from $s = 5$.