D. Shuffle
time limit per test
2 seconds
memory limit per test
512 megabytes
input
standard input
output
standard output

You are given a binary string (i. e. a string consisting of characters 0 and/or 1) $$$s$$$ of length $$$n$$$. You can perform the following operation with the string $$$s$$$ at most once: choose a substring (a contiguous subsequence) of $$$s$$$ having exactly $$$k$$$ characters 1 in it, and shuffle it (reorder the characters in the substring as you wish).

Calculate the number of different strings which can be obtained from $$$s$$$ by performing this operation at most once.

Input

The first line contains two integers $$$n$$$ and $$$k$$$ ($$$2 \le n \le 5000$$$; $$$0 \le k \le n$$$).

The second line contains the string $$$s$$$ of length $$$n$$$, consisting of characters 0 and/or 1.

Output

Print one integer — the number of different strings which can be obtained from $$$s$$$ by performing the described operation at most once. Since the answer can be large, output it modulo $$$998244353$$$.

Examples
Input
7 2
1100110
Output
16
Input
5 0
10010
Output
1
Input
8 1
10001000
Output
10
Input
10 8
0010011000
Output
1
Note

Some strings you can obtain in the first example:

  • to obtain 0110110, you can take the substring from the $$$1$$$-st character to the $$$4$$$-th character, which is 1100, and reorder its characters to get 0110;
  • to obtain 1111000, you can take the substring from the $$$3$$$-rd character to the $$$7$$$-th character, which is 00110, and reorder its characters to get 11000;
  • to obtain 1100101, you can take the substring from the $$$5$$$-th character to the $$$7$$$-th character, which is 110, and reorder its characters to get 101.

In the second example, $$$k = 0$$$ so you can only choose the substrings consisting only of 0 characters. Reordering them doesn't change the string at all, so the only string you can obtain is 10010.