#3110. [Usaco2016 OPen]Splitting the Field

[Usaco2016 OPen]Splitting the Field

Description

Farmer John's N cows (3≤N≤50,000) are all located at distinct positions in his two-dimensional fie

ld. FJ wants to enclose all of the cows with a rectangular fence whose sides are parallel to the x a

nd y axes, and he wants this fence to be as small as possible so that it contains everycow (cows on

the boundary are allowed).FJ is unfortunately on a tight budget due to low milk production last quar

ter. He would therefore like to enclose a smaller area to reduce maintenance costs, and the only way

he can see to do this is by building two enclosures instead of one. Please help him compute how muc

h less area he needs to enclose, in total, by using two enclosures instead of one. Like the original

enclosure, the two enclosures must collectively contain all the cows (with cows on boundaries allow

ed), and they must have sides parallel to the x and y axes. The two enclosures are notallowed to ove

rlap -- not even on their boundaries. Note that enclosures of zero area are legal, for example if an

enclosure has zero width and/or zero height.

Format

Input

The first line of input contains N. The nextNN lines each contain two integers specifying the location of a cow. Cow locations are positive integers in the range 1…1,000,000,000

Output

Write a single integer specifying amount of total area FJ can save by using two enclosures instead o

f one.

Samples

6
4 2
8 10
1 1
9 12
14 7
2 3
107