A. Bracket Sequence
time limit per test
2 seconds
memory limit per test
256 megabytes
input
stdin
output
stdout

A bracket sequence is a string, containing only characters "(", ")", "[" and "]".

A correct bracket sequence is a bracket sequence that can be transformed into a correct arithmetic expression by inserting characters "1" and "+" between the original characters of the sequence. For example, bracket sequences "()[]", "([])" are correct (the resulting expressions are: "(1)+[1]", "([1+1]+1)"), and "](" and "[" are not. The empty string is a correct bracket sequence by definition.

A substring s[l... r] (1 ≤ l ≤ r ≤ |s|) of string s = s1s2... s|s| (where |s| is the length of string s) is the string slsl + 1... sr. The empty string is a substring of any string by definition.

You are given a bracket sequence, not necessarily correct. Find its substring which is a correct bracket sequence and contains as many opening square brackets «[» as possible.

Input

The first and the only line contains the bracket sequence as a string, consisting only of characters "(", ")", "[" and "]". It is guaranteed that the string is non-empty and its length doesn't exceed 105 characters.

Output

In the first line print a single integer — the number of brackets «[» in the required bracket sequence. In the second line print the optimal sequence. If there are more than one optimal solutions print any of them.

Examples
Input
([])
Output
1
([])
Input
(((
Output
0