#P6795. 「ICPC World Finals 2020」地脉

「ICPC World Finals 2020」地脉

Description

In 1921, the amateur archaeologist Alfred Watkins coined the term "ley lines" to refer to straight lines between numerous places of geographical and historical interest. These lines have often been associated with mysterious and mystical theories, many of which still persist.

One of the common criticisms of ley lines is that lines one draws on a map are actually of non-zero width, and finding "lines" that connect multiple places is trivial, given a sufficient density of points and a sufficiently thick pencil. In this problem you will explore that criticism.

For simplicity, we will ignore the curvature of the earth, and just assume we are dealing with a set of points on a plane, each of which has a unique (x,y)(x, y) coordinate, and no three of which lie on a single straight line. Given such a set, and the thickness of your pencil, what is the largest number of points through which you can draw a single line?

Input

The first line of input consists of two integers nn and tt, where nn (3n30003 \le n \le 3\,000) is the number of points in the set and tt (0t1090 \le t \le 10^9) is the thickness of the pencil. Then follow nn lines, each containing two integers xx and yy (109x,y109-10^9 \le x, y \le 10^9), indicating the coordinates of a point in the set.

You may assume that the input is such that the answer would not change if the thickness tt was increased or decreased by 10210^{-2}, and that no three input points are collinear.

Output

Output the maximum number of points that lie on a single "line" of thickness tt.

4 2
0 0
2 4
4 9
3 1

3

3 1
0 10
2000 10
1000 12

2