Company Organization
You started a company a few years ago and fortunately it has been highly successful. As the growth of the company, you noticed that you need to manage employees in a more organized way, and decided to form several groups and assign employees to them.
Now, you are planning to form n groups, each of which corresponds to a project in the company. Sometimes you have constraints on members in groups. For example, a group must be a subset of another group because the former group will consist of senior members of the latter group, the members in two groups must be the same because current activities of the two projects are closely related, the members in two groups must not be exactly the same to avoid corruption, two groups cannot have a common employee because of a security reason, and two groups must have a common employee to facilitate collaboration.
In summary, by letting Xi (i = 1, ..., n) be the set of employees assigned to the i-th group, we have ve types of constraints as follows.
X_i
X_j
X_i = X_j
X_i ≠ X_j
X_i
X_j = ∅
X_i
X_j ≠ ∅
Since you have listed up constraints without considering consistency, it might be the case that you cannot satisfy all the constraints. Constraints are thus ordered according to their priorities, and you now want to know how many constraints of the highest priority can be satis ed.
You do not have to take ability of employees into consideration. That is, you can assign anyone to any group. Also, you can form groups with no employee. Furthermore, you can hire or fire as many employees as you want if you can satisfy more constraints by doing so. For example, suppose that we have the following ve constraints on three groups in the order of their priorities, corresponding to the rst dataset in the sample input.
X_2
X_1
X_3
X_2
X_1
X_3
X_1 ≠ X_3
X_3
X_1
By assigning the same set of employees to X_1, X_2, and X_3, we can satisfy the rst three constraints. However, no matter how we assign employees to X_1, X_2, and X_3, we cannot satisfy the first four highest priority constraints at the same time. Though we can satisfy the first three constraints and the fifth constraint at the same time, the answer should be three.
Input
The input consists of several datasets. The first line of a dataset consists of two integers n (2 ≤ n ≤ 100) and m (1 ≤ m ≤ 10000), which indicate the number of groups and the number of constraints, respectively. Then, description of mconstraints follows. The description of each constraint consists of three integers s (1 ≤ s ≤ 5), i (1 ≤ i ≤ n), and j (1 ≤ j ≤ n; j ≠ i), meaning a constraint of the s-th type imposed on the i-th group and the j-th group. The type number of a constraint is as listed above. The constraints are given in the descending order of priority.
The input ends with a line containing two zeros.
Output
For each dataset, output the number of constraints of the highest priority satis able at the same time.