B :: Transmitters
Time Limit: 1 Second Memory Limit: 32768 KB
	In a wireless network with multiple transmitters sending on the same frequencies, 
 it is often a requirement that signals don't overlap, or at least that they 
 don't conflict. One way of accomplishing this is to restrict a transmitter's 
 coverage area. This problem uses a shielded transmitter that only broadcasts 
 in a semicircle.
 
 A transmitter T is located somewhere on a 1,000 square meter grid. It broadcasts 
 in a semicircular area of radius r. The transmitter may be rotated any amount, 
 but not moved. Given N points anywhere on the grid, compute the maximum number 
 of points that can be simultaneously reached by the transmitter's signal. Figure 
 1 shows the same data points with two different transmitter rotations.
	 
 
Input
	All input coordinates are integers (0-1000). The radius is a positive 
 real number greater than 0. Points on the boundary of a semicircle are considered 
 within that semicircle. There are 1-150 unique points to examine per transmitter. 
 No points are at the same location as the transmitter.
 
 Input consists of information for one or more independent transmitter problems. 
 Each problem begins with one line containing the (x,y) coordinates of the transmitter 
 followed by the broadcast radius, r. The next line contains the number of points 
 N on the grid, followed by N sets of (x,y) coordinates, one set per line. The 
 end of the input is signalled by a line with a negative radius; the (x,y) values 
 will be present but indeterminate. Figures 1 and 2 represent the data in the 
 first two example data sets below, though they are on different scales. Figures 
 1a and 2 show transmitter rotations that result in maximal coverage.
 
  
Output
For each transmitter, the output contains a single line with the maximum number of points that can be contained in some semicircle.Sample Input
25 25 3.5 7 25 28 23 27 27 27 24 23 26 23 24 29 26 29 350 200 2.0 5 350 202 350 199 350 198 348 200 352 200 995 995 10.0 4 1000 1000 999 998 990 992 1000 999 100 100 -2.5
Sample Output
3 4 4Submit
Source: Mid-Central USA 2001