Valera is a collector. Once he wanted to expand his collection with exactly one antique item.
Valera knows n sellers of antiques, the i-th of them auctioned ki items. Currently the auction price of the j-th object of the i-th seller issij. Valera gets on well with each of the n sellers. He is perfectly sure that if he outbids the current price of one of the items in the auction (in other words, offers the seller the money that is strictly greater than the current price of the item at the auction), the seller of the object will immediately sign a contract with him.
Unfortunately, Valera has only v units of money. Help him to determine which of the n sellers he can make a deal with.
Input
The first line contains two space-separated integers n, v(1 ≤ n ≤ 50; 104 ≤ v ≤ 106) — the number of sellers and the units of money the Valera has.
Then n lines follow. The i-th line first contains integer ki(1 ≤ ki ≤ 50) the number of items of the i-th seller. Then go ki space-separated integers si1, si2, …, siki(104 ≤ sij ≤ 106) — the current prices of the items of the i-th seller.
Output
In the first line, print integer p — the number of sellers with who Valera can make a deal.
In the second line print p space-separated integers q1, q2, …, qp(1 ≤ qi ≤ n) — the numbers of the sellers with who Valera can make a deal. Print the numbers of the sellers in the increasing order.
Sample test(s)
input
1
2
3
4
350000
140000
22000060000
31000070000190000
output
1
2
3
123
input
1
2
3
4
350000
150000
3100000120000110000
3120000110000120000
output
1
Note
In the first sample Valera can bargain with each of the sellers. He can outbid the following items: a 40000 item from the first seller, a20000 item from the second seller, and a 10000 item from the third seller.
In the second sample Valera can not make a deal with any of the sellers, as the prices of all items in the auction too big for him.