A positive integer may be expressed as a sum of different prime numbers (primes), in one way or another. Given two positive integers n and k, you should count the number of ways to express n as a sum of k different primes. Here, two ways are considered to be the same if they sum up the same set of the primes. For example, 8 can be expressed as 3 + 5 and 5 + 3 but they are not distinguished.
When n and k are 24 and 3 respectively, the answer is two because there are two sets {2, 3, 19} and {2, 5, 17} whose sums are equal to 24. There are no other sets of three primes that sum up to 24. For n = 24 and k = 2, the answer is three, because there are three sets {5, 19}, {7, 17} and {11, 13}. For n = 2 and k = 1, the answer is one, because there is only one set {2} whose sum is 2. For n = 1 and k = 1, the answer is zero. As 1 is not a prime, you shouldn't count {1}. For n = 4 and k = 2, the answer is zero, because there are no sets of two different primes whose sums are 4.
Your job is to write a program that reports the number of such ways for the given n and k.
Each line gives one dataset containing two positive integers n (n ≤ 1120) and k (k ≤ 14) separated by a space. The last line contains two zeros and is not processed.
For each test case print in a separate line the number of ways to express n as a sum of k different primes. You may assume that each answer is less than 2^31.