#P1107F. Vasya and Endless Credits

    ID: 4594 Type: RemoteJudge 3000ms 256MiB Tried: 0 Accepted: 0 Difficulty: (None) Uploaded By: Tags>dpflowsgraph matchingsgraphssortings*2600

Vasya and Endless Credits

No submission language available for this problem.

Description

Vasya wants to buy himself a nice new car. Unfortunately, he lacks some money. Currently he has exactly 0 burles.

However, the local bank has nn credit offers. Each offer can be described with three numbers aia_i, bib_i and kik_i. Offers are numbered from 11 to nn. If Vasya takes the ii-th offer, then the bank gives him aia_i burles at the beginning of the month and then Vasya pays bank bib_i burles at the end of each month for the next kik_i months (including the month he activated the offer). Vasya can take the offers any order he wants.

Each month Vasya can take no more than one credit offer. Also each credit offer can not be used more than once. Several credits can be active at the same time. It implies that Vasya pays bank the sum of bib_i over all the ii of active credits at the end of each month.

Vasya wants to buy a car in the middle of some month. He just takes all the money he currently has and buys the car of that exact price.

Vasya don't really care what he'll have to pay the bank back after he buys a car. He just goes out of the country on his car so that the bank can't find him anymore.

What is the maximum price that car can have?

The first line contains one integer nn (1n5001 \le n \le 500) — the number of credit offers.

Each of the next nn lines contains three integers aia_i, bib_i and kik_i (1ai,bi,ki1091 \le a_i, b_i, k_i \le 10^9).

Print one integer — the maximum price of the car.

Input

The first line contains one integer nn (1n5001 \le n \le 500) — the number of credit offers.

Each of the next nn lines contains three integers aia_i, bib_i and kik_i (1ai,bi,ki1091 \le a_i, b_i, k_i \le 10^9).

Output

Print one integer — the maximum price of the car.

Samples

Sample Input 1

4
10 9 2
20 33 1
30 115 1
5 3 2

Sample Output 1

32

Sample Input 2

3
40 1 2
1000 1100 5
300 2 1

Sample Output 2

1337

Note

In the first example, the following sequence of offers taken is optimal: 4 \rightarrow 3.

The amount of burles Vasya has changes the following way: 5 \rightarrow 32 \rightarrow -86 \rightarrow .... He takes the money he has in the middle of the second month (32 burles) and buys the car.

The negative amount of money means that Vasya has to pay the bank that amount of burles.

In the second example, the following sequence of offers taken is optimal: 3 \rightarrow 1 \rightarrow 2.

The amount of burles Vasya has changes the following way: 0 \rightarrow 300 \rightarrow 338 \rightarrow 1337 \rightarrow 236 \rightarrow -866 \rightarrow ....