J. Count BFS Graph
time limit per test
1 second
memory limit per test
1024 megabytes
input
standard input
output
standard output

You are currently researching a graph traversal algorithm called the Breadth First Search (BFS). Suppose you have an input graph of $$$N$$$ nodes (numbered from $$$1$$$ to $$$N$$$). The graph is represented by an adjacency matrix $$$M$$$, for which node $$$u$$$ can traverse to node $$$v$$$ if $$$M_{u, v}$$$ is $$$1$$$, otherwise it is $$$0$$$. Your algorithm will output the order the nodes are visited in the BFS. The pseudocode of the algorithm is presented as follows.


BFS(M[1..N][1..N]):
let A be an empty array
let Q be an empty queue

append 1 to A
push 1 to Q

while Q is not empty:
pop the front element of Q into u
for v = 1 to N:
if M[u][v] == 1 and v is not in A:
append v to A
push v to Q

return A

During your research, you are interested in the following problem. Given an array $$$A$$$ such that $$$A$$$ is a permutation of $$$1$$$ to $$$N$$$ and $$$A_1 = 1$$$. How many simple undirected graph with $$$N$$$ nodes and adjacency matrix $$$M$$$ such that $$$\text{BFS}(M) = A$$$? Since the answer can be very large, calculate the answer modulo $$$998\,244\,353$$$.

A simple graph has no self-loop ($$$M_{i, i} = 0$$$ for $$$1 \leq i \leq N$$$) and there is at most one edge that connects a pair of nodes. In an undirected graph, if node $$$u$$$ is adjacent to node $$$v$$$, then node $$$v$$$ is also adjacent to node $$$u$$$; formally, $$$M_{u, v} = M_{v, u}$$$ for $$$1 \leq u < v \leq N$$$.

Two graphs are considered different if there is an edge that exists in one graph but not the other. In other words, two graphs are considered different if their adjacency matrices are different.

Input

The first line consists of an integer $$$N$$$ ($$$2 \leq N \leq 5000$$$).

The second line consists of $$$N$$$ integers $$$A_i$$$. The array $$$A$$$ is a permutation of $$$1$$$ to $$$N$$$ and $$$A_1 = 1$$$.

Output

Output an integer representing the number of simple undirected graphs with $$$N$$$ nodes and adjacency matrix $$$M$$$ such that $$$\text{BFS}(M) = A$$$. Since the answer can be very large, output the answer modulo $$$998\,244\,353$$$.

Examples
Input
3
1 2 3
Output
3
Input
3
1 3 2
Output
1
Input
5
1 3 2 4 5
Output
17
Input
11
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
Output
379394847
Note

Explanation for the sample input/output #1

The following illustration shows all graphs that satisfy the requirements.

Explanation for the sample input/output #2

The only graph that satisfies the requirements is a graph with two edges: one that connects nodes $$$1$$$ and $$$3$$$, and another one that connects nodes $$$3$$$ and $$$2$$$.