Bajtek, the youngest employee of the newly opened Bajtocja embassy in Poland, is discovering at every turn that the Polish language can be difficult for foreign guests. He has particular trouble with words that contain three consecutive consonants (such as "kostka" or "potyczki") or three consecutive vowels* ("geoinżynieria", "nieautoryzowany") — he is unable to pronounce such words, which makes him a frequent target of his colleagues' crude jokes.
Christmas is approaching, and the PR department has come up with a brilliant (or so they think) idea: recording a video with holiday wishes for Poles, which will be read by Bajtocjanie one by one. The full text of the wishes has already been sent to all embassy employees. The text is a string containing no spaces (most employees know Polish no better than Bajtek, so word division would only hinder them) and no Polish characters (in truth, no one wants to know how the average Bajtocjanin reads "ź").
Bajtek does not yet know which part of the wishes he will be assigned to read, but he would like to assess how poor his chances are. Calculate how many possible substrings of the text he will be unable to pronounce (due to three consecutive consonants or vowels).
Input
The first and only line of input contains a string consisting of lowercase English letters, containing at least one and at most 200,000 characters.
Output
Your program should output a single integer – the number of substrings that are difficult for Bajtek. If an identical difficult substring appears in two (or more) places in the text, it should be counted multiple times.
Examples
Input 1
kostka
Output 1
6
Note 1
The difficult substrings for Bajtek are: stk, ostk, kostk, stka, ostka, and kostka.
Input 2
aaaa
Output 2
3
*For the record, we remind you that the vowels are the letters "a", "e", "i", "o", "u", and "y".