If we take a number like 5 and represent it as a binary number, we’ll get 101. We can complement it and get 10 (discard the initial 0) which corresponds to 2. Complementing it again will result in 1 (discard the initial 0) which corresponds to 1. And complementing 1 will give us 0.
101 → 10 → 1 → 0.
So, to get from 5 to 0 we had to perform 3 complement operations. It’s pretty tedious to do this by hand, so the company asks you to write a program that would compute the number of complement operations that would turn the initial number n to 0.
Input
The input contains a single integer n (1 ≤ n ≤ ).
Output
The output should contain a single integer - the number of complement operations we need to perform to turn n into 0.