# 1129_D. Isolation ## Problem Description Find the number of ways to divide an array a of n integers into any number of disjoint non-empty segments so that, in each segment, there exist at most k distinct integers that appear exactly once. Since the answer can be large, find it modulo 998 244 353. Input The first line contains two space-separated integers n and k (1 ≤ k ≤ n ≤ 10^5) — the number of elements in the array a and the restriction from the statement. The following line contains n space-separated integers a_1, a_2, …, a_n (1 ≤ a_i ≤ n) — elements of the array a. Output The first and only line contains the number of ways to divide an array a modulo 998 244 353. Examples Input 3 1 1 1 2 Output 3 Input 5 2 1 1 2 1 3 Output 14 Input 5 5 1 2 3 4 5 Output 16 Note In the first sample, the three possible divisions are as follows. * [[1], [1], [2]] * [[1, 1], [2]] * [[1, 1, 2]] Division [[1], [1, 2]] is not possible because two distinct integers appear exactly once in the second segment [1, 2]. ## Contest Information - **Contest ID**: 1129 - **Problem Index**: D - **Points**: 2250.0 - **Rating**: 2900 - **Tags**: data structures, dp - **Time Limit**: {'seconds': 3, 'nanos': 0} seconds - **Memory Limit**: 256000000 bytes ## Task Solve this competitive programming problem. Provide a complete solution that handles all the given constraints and edge cases.