System Overload

Time Limit: 10 Seconds    Memory Limit: 32768 KB

Recently you must have experienced that when too many people use the BBS simultaneously, the net becomes very, very slow.
To put an end to this problem, the Sysop has developed a contingency scheme for times of peak load to cut off net access for some buildings of the university in a systematic, totally fair manner. Our university buildings were enumerated randomly from 1 to n. XWB is number 1, CaoGuangBiao (CGB) Building is number 2, and so on in a purely random order.
Then a number m would be picked at random, and BBS access would first be cut off in building 1 (clearly the fairest starting point) and then in every mth building after that, wrapping around to 1 after n, and ignoring buildings already cut off. For example, if n=17 and m=5, net access would be cut off to the buildings in the order [1,6,11,16,5,12,2,9,17,10,4,15,14,3,8,13,7]. The problem is that it is clearly fairest to cut off CGB Building last (after all, this is where the best programmers come from), so for a given n, the random number m needs to be carefully chosen so that building 2 is the last building selected.

Your job is to write a program that will read in a number of buildings n and then determine the smallest integer m that will ensure that our CGB Building can surf the net while the rest of the university is cut off.

Input

The input file will contain one or more lines, each line containing one integer n with 3 <= n < 150, representing the number of buildings in the university.
Input is terminated by a value of zero (0) for n.

Output

For each line of the input, print one line containing the integer m fulfilling the requirement specified above.

Sample Input

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
0

Sample Output

2
5
2
4
3
11
2
3
8
16
Submit

Source: University of Ulm Local Contest 1996