2022-04-21
705. Design HashSet
Topic: Array, Hash Table, Linked List, Design, Hash Function
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Design a HashSet without using any built-in hash table libraries.
Implement
•
•
•
Example 1:
Constraints:
•
• At most
705. Design HashSet
Topic: Array, Hash Table, Linked List, Design, Hash Function
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Design a HashSet without using any built-in hash table libraries.
Implement
MyHashSet class:•
void add(key) Inserts the value key into the HashSet.•
bool contains(key) Returns whether the value key exists in the HashSet or not.•
void remove(key) Removes the value key in the HashSet. If key does not exist in the HashSet, do nothing.Example 1:
Input
["MyHashSet", "add", "add", "contains", "contains", "add", "contains", "remove", "contains"]
[[], [1], [2], [1], [3], [2], [2], [2], [2]]
Output
[null, null, null, true, false, null, true, null, false]
Explanation
MyHashSet myHashSet = new MyHashSet();
myHashSet.add(1); // set = [1]
myHashSet.add(2); // set = [1, 2]
myHashSet.contains(1); // return True
myHashSet.contains(3); // return False, (not found)
myHashSet.add(2); // set = [1, 2]
myHashSet.contains(2); // return True
myHashSet.remove(2); // set = [1]
myHashSet.contains(2); // return False, (already removed)
Constraints:
•
0 <= key <= 10^6• At most
10^4 calls will be made to add, remove, and contains.2022-04-22
706. Design HashMap
Topic: Array, Hash Table, Linked List, Design, Hash Function
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Design a HashMap without using any built-in hash table libraries.
Implement the
•
•
•
•
Example 1:
Constraints:
•
• At most
706. Design HashMap
Topic: Array, Hash Table, Linked List, Design, Hash Function
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Design a HashMap without using any built-in hash table libraries.
Implement the
MyHashMap class:•
MyHashMap() initializes the object with an empty map.•
void put(int key, int value) inserts a (key, value) pair into the HashMap. If the key already exists in the map, update the corresponding value.•
int get(int key) returns the value to which the specified key is mapped, or -1 if this map contains no mapping for the key.•
void remove(key) removes the key and its corresponding value if the map contains the mapping for the key.Example 1:
Input
["MyHashMap", "put", "put", "get", "get", "put", "get", "remove", "get"]
[[], [1, 1], [2, 2], [1], [3], [2, 1], [2], [2], [2]]
Output
[null, null, null, 1, -1, null, 1, null, -1]
Explanation
MyHashMap myHashMap = new MyHashMap();
myHashMap.put(1, 1); // The map is now [[1,1]]
myHashMap.put(2, 2); // The map is now [[1,1], [2,2]]
myHashMap.get(1); // return 1, The map is now [[1,1], [2,2]]
myHashMap.get(3); // return -1 (i.e., not found), The map is now [[1,1], [2,2]]
myHashMap.put(2, 1); // The map is now [[1,1], [2,1]] (i.e., update the existing value)
myHashMap.get(2); // return 1, The map is now [[1,1], [2,1]]
myHashMap.remove(2); // remove the mapping for 2, The map is now [[1,1]]
myHashMap.get(2); // return -1 (i.e., not found), The map is now [[1,1]]
Constraints:
•
0 <= key, value <= 10^6• At most
10^4 calls will be made to put, get, and remove.2022-04-23
535. Encode and Decode TinyURL
Topic: Hash Table, String, Design, Hash Function
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Note: This is a companion problem to the System Design problem: Design TinyURL.
TinyURL is a URL shortening service where you enter a URL such as
There is no restriction on how your encode/decode algorithm should work. You just need to ensure that a URL can be encoded to a tiny URL and the tiny URL can be decoded to the original URL.
Implement the
•
•
•
Example 1:
Constraints:
•
•
535. Encode and Decode TinyURL
Topic: Hash Table, String, Design, Hash Function
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Note: This is a companion problem to the System Design problem: Design TinyURL.
TinyURL is a URL shortening service where you enter a URL such as
https://leetcode.com/problems/design-tinyurl and it returns a short URL such as http://tinyurl.com/4e9iAk. Design a class to encode a URL and decode a tiny URL.There is no restriction on how your encode/decode algorithm should work. You just need to ensure that a URL can be encoded to a tiny URL and the tiny URL can be decoded to the original URL.
Implement the
Solution class:•
Solution() Initializes the object of the system.•
String encode(String longUrl) Returns a tiny URL for the given longUrl.•
String decode(String shortUrl) Returns the original long URL for the given shortUrl. It is guaranteed that the given shortUrl was encoded by the same object.Example 1:
Input: url = "https://leetcode.com/problems/design-tinyurl"
Output: "https://leetcode.com/problems/design-tinyurl"
Explanation:
Solution obj = new Solution();
string tiny = obj.encode(url); // returns the encoded tiny url.
string ans = obj.decode(tiny); // returns the original url after deconding it.
Constraints:
•
1 <= url.length <= 10^4•
url is guranteed to be a valid URL.2022-04-24
1396. Design Underground System
Topic: Hash Table, String, Design
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
An underground railway system is keeping track of customer travel times between different stations. They are using this data to calculate the average time it takes to travel from one station to another.
Implement the
•
• A customer with a card ID equal to
• A customer can only be checked into one place at a time.
•
• A customer with a card ID equal to
•
• Returns the average time it takes to travel from
• The average time is computed from all the previous traveling times from
• The time it takes to travel from
• There will be at least one customer that has traveled from
You may assume all calls to the
Example 1:
Constraints:
•
•
• All strings consist of uppercase and lowercase English letters and digits.
• There will be at most
• Answers within
1396. Design Underground System
Topic: Hash Table, String, Design
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
An underground railway system is keeping track of customer travel times between different stations. They are using this data to calculate the average time it takes to travel from one station to another.
Implement the
UndergroundSystem class:•
void checkIn(int id, string stationName, int t)• A customer with a card ID equal to
id, checks in at the station stationName at time t.• A customer can only be checked into one place at a time.
•
void checkOut(int id, string stationName, int t)• A customer with a card ID equal to
id, checks out from the station stationName at time t.•
double getAverageTime(string startStation, string endStation)• Returns the average time it takes to travel from
startStation to endStation.• The average time is computed from all the previous traveling times from
startStation to endStation that happened directly, meaning a check in at startStation followed by a check out from endStation.• The time it takes to travel from
startStation to endStation may be different from the time it takes to travel from endStation to startStation.• There will be at least one customer that has traveled from
startStation to endStation before getAverageTime is called.You may assume all calls to the
checkIn and checkOut methods are consistent. If a customer checks in at time t_1 then checks out at time t_2, then t_1 < t_2. All events happen in chronological order.Example 1:
Input
["UndergroundSystem","checkIn","checkIn","checkIn","checkOut","checkOut","checkOut","getAverageTime","getAverageTime","checkIn","getAverageTime","checkOut","getAverageTime"]
[[],[45,"Leyton",3],[32,"Paradise",8],[27,"Leyton",10],[45,"Waterloo",15],[27,"Waterloo",20],[32,"Cambridge",22],["Paradise","Cambridge"],["Leyton","Waterloo"],[10,"Leyton",24],["Leyton","Waterloo"],[10,"Waterloo",38],["Leyton","Waterloo"]]
Output
[null,null,null,null,null,null,null,14.00000,11.00000,null,11.00000,null,12.00000]
Explanation
UndergroundSystem undergroundSystem = new UndergroundSystem();
undergroundSystem.checkIn(45, "Leyton", 3);
undergroundSystem.checkIn(32, "Paradise", 8);
undergroundSystem.checkIn(27, "Leyton", 10);
undergroundSystem.checkOut(45, "Waterloo", 15); // Customer 45 "Leyton" -> "Waterloo" in 15-3 = 12
undergroundSystem.checkOut(27, "Waterloo", 20); // Customer 27 "Leyton" -> "Waterloo" in 20-10 = 10
undergroundSystem.checkOut(32, "Cambridge", 22); // Customer 32 "Paradise" -> "Cambridge" in 22-8 = 14
undergroundSystem.getAverageTime("Paradise", "Cambridge"); // return 14.00000. One trip "Paradise" -> "Cambridge", (14) / 1 = 14
undergroundSystem.getAverageTime("Leyton", "Waterloo"); // return 11.00000. Two trips "Leyton" -> "Waterloo", (10 + 12) / 2 = 11
undergroundSystem.checkIn(10, "Leyton", 24);
undergroundSystem.getAverageTime("Leyton", "Waterloo"); // return 11.00000
undergroundSystem.checkOut(10, "Waterloo", 38); // Customer 10 "Leyton" -> "Waterloo" in 38-24 = 14
undergroundSystem.getAverageTime("Leyton", "Waterloo"); // return 12.00000. Three trips "Leyton" -> "Waterloo", (10 + 12 + 14) / 3 = 12
Constraints:
•
1 <= id, t <= 10^6•
1 <= stationName.length, startStation.length, endStation.length <= 10• All strings consist of uppercase and lowercase English letters and digits.
• There will be at most
2 * 10^4 calls in total to checkIn, checkOut, and getAverageTime.• Answers within
10^-5 of the actual value will be accepted.2022-04-25
284. Peeking Iterator
Topic: Array, Design, Iterator
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Design an iterator that supports the
Implement the
•
•
•
•
Note: Each language may have a different implementation of the constructor and
Example 1:
Constraints:
•
•
• All the calls to
• At most
Follow up: How would you extend your design to be generic and work with all types, not just integer?
284. Peeking Iterator
Topic: Array, Design, Iterator
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Design an iterator that supports the
peek operation on an existing iterator in addition to the hasNext and the next operations.Implement the
PeekingIterator class:•
PeekingIterator(Iterator<int> nums) Initializes the object with the given integer iterator iterator.•
int next() Returns the next element in the array and moves the pointer to the next element.•
boolean hasNext() Returns true if there are still elements in the array.•
int peek() Returns the next element in the array without moving the pointer.Note: Each language may have a different implementation of the constructor and
Iterator, but they all support the int next() and boolean hasNext() functions.Example 1:
Input
["PeekingIterator", "next", "peek", "next", "next", "hasNext"]
[[[1, 2, 3]], [], [], [], [], []]
Output
[null, 1, 2, 2, 3, false]
Explanation
PeekingIterator peekingIterator = new PeekingIterator([1, 2, 3]); // [1,2,3]
peekingIterator.next(); // return 1, the pointer moves to the next element [1,2,3].
peekingIterator.peek(); // return 2, the pointer does not move [1,2,3].
peekingIterator.next(); // return 2, the pointer moves to the next element [1,2,3]
peekingIterator.next(); // return 3, the pointer moves to the next element [1,2,3]
peekingIterator.hasNext(); // return False
Constraints:
•
1 <= nums.length <= 1000•
1 <= nums[i] <= 1000• All the calls to
next and peek are valid.• At most
1000 calls will be made to next, hasNext, and peek.Follow up: How would you extend your design to be generic and work with all types, not just integer?
2022-04-26
1584. Min Cost to Connect All Points
Topic: Array, Union Find, Minimum Spanning Tree
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given an array
The cost of connecting two points
Return the minimum cost to make all points connected. All points are connected if there is exactly one simple path between any two points.
Example 1:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/08/26/d.png
Example 2:
Constraints:
•
•
• All pairs
1584. Min Cost to Connect All Points
Topic: Array, Union Find, Minimum Spanning Tree
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given an array
points representing integer coordinates of some points on a 2D-plane, where points[i] = [x_i, y_i].The cost of connecting two points
[x_i, y_i] and [x_j, y_j] is the manhattan distance between them: |x_i - x_j| + |y_i - y_j|, where |val| denotes the absolute value of val.Return the minimum cost to make all points connected. All points are connected if there is exactly one simple path between any two points.
Example 1:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/08/26/d.png
Input: points = [[0,0],[2,2],[3,10],[5,2],[7,0]]
Output: 20
Explanation:
Image: [https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/08/26/c.png](https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/08/26/c.png)
We can connect the points as shown above to get the minimum cost of 20.
Notice that there is a unique path between every pair of points.
Example 2:
Input: points = [[3,12],[-2,5],[-4,1]]
Output: 18
Constraints:
•
1 <= points.length <= 1000•
-10^6 <= x_i, y_i <= 10^6• All pairs
(x_i, y_i) are distinct.2022-04-27
1202. Smallest String With Swaps
Topic: Hash Table, String, Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given a string
You can swap the characters at any pair of indices in the given
Return the lexicographically smallest string that
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
•
•
•
•
1202. Smallest String With Swaps
Topic: Hash Table, String, Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given a string
s, and an array of pairs of indices in the string pairs where pairs[i] = [a, b] indicates 2 indices(0-indexed) of the string.You can swap the characters at any pair of indices in the given
pairs any number of times.Return the lexicographically smallest string that
s can be changed to after using the swaps.Example 1:
Input: s = "dcab", pairs = [[0,3],[1,2]]
Output: "bacd"
Explaination:
Swap s[0] and s[3], s = "bcad"
Swap s[1] and s[2], s = "bacd"
Example 2:
Input: s = "dcab", pairs = [[0,3],[1,2],[0,2]]
Output: "abcd"
Explaination:
Swap s[0] and s[3], s = "bcad"
Swap s[0] and s[2], s = "acbd"
Swap s[1] and s[2], s = "abcd"
Example 3:
Input: s = "cba", pairs = [[0,1],[1,2]]
Output: "abc"
Explaination:
Swap s[0] and s[1], s = "bca"
Swap s[1] and s[2], s = "bac"
Swap s[0] and s[1], s = "abc"
Constraints:
•
1 <= s.length <= 10^5•
0 <= pairs.length <= 10^5•
0 <= pairs[i][0], pairs[i][1] < s.length•
s only contains lower case English letters.2022-04-28
1631. Path With Minimum Effort
Topic: Array, Binary Search, Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find, Heap (Priority Queue), Matrix
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are a hiker preparing for an upcoming hike. You are given
A route's effort is the maximum absolute difference in heights between two consecutive cells of the route.
Return the minimum effort required to travel from the top-left cell to the bottom-right cell.
Example 1:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/04/ex1.png
Example 2:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/04/ex2.png
Example 3:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/04/ex3.png
Constraints:
•
•
•
•
1631. Path With Minimum Effort
Topic: Array, Binary Search, Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find, Heap (Priority Queue), Matrix
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are a hiker preparing for an upcoming hike. You are given
heights, a 2D array of size rows x columns, where heights[row][col] represents the height of cell (row, col). You are situated in the top-left cell, (0, 0), and you hope to travel to the bottom-right cell, (rows-1, columns-1) (i.e., 0-indexed). You can move up, down, left, or right, and you wish to find a route that requires the minimum effort.A route's effort is the maximum absolute difference in heights between two consecutive cells of the route.
Return the minimum effort required to travel from the top-left cell to the bottom-right cell.
Example 1:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/04/ex1.png
Input: heights = [[1,2,2],[3,8,2],[5,3,5]]
Output: 2
Explanation: The route of [1,3,5,3,5] has a maximum absolute difference of 2 in consecutive cells.
This is better than the route of [1,2,2,2,5], where the maximum absolute difference is 3.
Example 2:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/04/ex2.png
Input: heights = [[1,2,3],[3,8,4],[5,3,5]]
Output: 1
Explanation: The route of [1,2,3,4,5] has a maximum absolute difference of 1 in consecutive cells, which is better than route [1,3,5,3,5].
Example 3:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/04/ex3.png
Input: heights = [[1,2,1,1,1],[1,2,1,2,1],[1,2,1,2,1],[1,2,1,2,1],[1,1,1,2,1]]
Output: 0
Explanation: This route does not require any effort.
Constraints:
•
rows == heights.length•
columns == heights[i].length•
1 <= rows, columns <= 100•
1 <= heights[i][j] <= 10^62022-04-29
785. Is Graph Bipartite?
Topic: Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find, Graph
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
There is an undirected graph with
• There are no self-edges (
• There are no parallel edges (
• If
• The graph may not be connected, meaning there may be two nodes
A graph is bipartite if the nodes can be partitioned into two independent sets
Return
Example 1:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/21/bi2.jpg
Example 2:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/21/bi1.jpg
Constraints:
•
•
•
•
•
• All the values of
• If
785. Is Graph Bipartite?
Topic: Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find, Graph
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
There is an undirected graph with
n nodes, where each node is numbered between 0 and n - 1. You are given a 2D array graph, where graph[u] is an array of nodes that node u is adjacent to. More formally, for each v in graph[u], there is an undirected edge between node u and node v. The graph has the following properties:• There are no self-edges (
graph[u] does not contain u).• There are no parallel edges (
graph[u] does not contain duplicate values).• If
v is in graph[u], then u is in graph[v] (the graph is undirected).• The graph may not be connected, meaning there may be two nodes
u and v such that there is no path between them.A graph is bipartite if the nodes can be partitioned into two independent sets
A and B such that every edge in the graph connects a node in set A and a node in set B.Return
true if and only if it is bipartite.Example 1:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/21/bi2.jpg
Input: graph = [[1,2,3],[0,2],[0,1,3],[0,2]]
Output: false
Explanation: There is no way to partition the nodes into two independent sets such that every edge connects a node in one and a node in the other.
Example 2:
Image: https://assets.leetcode.com/uploads/2020/10/21/bi1.jpg
Input: graph = [[1,3],[0,2],[1,3],[0,2]]
Output: true
Explanation: We can partition the nodes into two sets: {0, 2} and {1, 3}.
Constraints:
•
graph.length == n•
1 <= n <= 100•
0 <= graph[u].length < n•
0 <= graph[u][i] <= n - 1•
graph[u] does not contain u.• All the values of
graph[u] are unique.• If
graph[u] contains v, then graph[v] contains u.2022-04-30
399. Evaluate Division
Topic: Array, Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find, Graph, Shortest Path
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given an array of variable pairs
You are also given some
Return the answers to all queries. If a single answer cannot be determined, return
Note: The input is always valid. You may assume that evaluating the queries will not result in division by zero and that there is no contradiction.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
399. Evaluate Division
Topic: Array, Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find, Graph, Shortest Path
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given an array of variable pairs
equations and an array of real numbers values, where equations[i] = [A_i, B_i] and values[i] represent the equation A_i / B_i = values[i]. Each A_i or B_i is a string that represents a single variable.You are also given some
queries, where queries[j] = [C_j, D_j] represents the j^th query where you must find the answer for C_j / D_j = ?.Return the answers to all queries. If a single answer cannot be determined, return
-1.0.Note: The input is always valid. You may assume that evaluating the queries will not result in division by zero and that there is no contradiction.
Example 1:
Input: equations = [["a","b"],["b","c"]], values = [2.0,3.0], queries = [["a","c"],["b","a"],["a","e"],["a","a"],["x","x"]]
Output: [6.00000,0.50000,-1.00000,1.00000,-1.00000]
Explanation:
Given: a / b = 2.0, b / c = 3.0
queries are: a / c = ?, b / a = ?, a / e = ?, a / a = ?, x / x = ?
return: [6.0, 0.5, -1.0, 1.0, -1.0 ]
Example 2:
Input: equations = [["a","b"],["b","c"],["bc","cd"]], values = [1.5,2.5,5.0], queries = [["a","c"],["c","b"],["bc","cd"],["cd","bc"]]
Output: [3.75000,0.40000,5.00000,0.20000]
Example 3:
Input: equations = [["a","b"]], values = [0.5], queries = [["a","b"],["b","a"],["a","c"],["x","y"]]
Output: [0.50000,2.00000,-1.00000,-1.00000]
Constraints:
•
1 <= equations.length <= 20•
equations[i].length == 2•
1 <= A_i.length, B_i.length <= 5•
values.length == equations.length•
0.0 < values[i] <= 20.0•
1 <= queries.length <= 20•
queries[i].length == 2•
1 <= C_j.length, D_j.length <= 5•
A_i, B_i, C_j, D_j consist of lower case English letters and digits.2022-05-01
844. Backspace String Compare
Topic: Two Pointers, String, Stack, Simulation
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Given two strings
Note that after backspacing an empty text, the text will continue empty.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
•
•
Follow up: Can you solve it in
844. Backspace String Compare
Topic: Two Pointers, String, Stack, Simulation
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Given two strings
s and t, return true if they are equal when both are typed into empty text editors. '#' means a backspace character.Note that after backspacing an empty text, the text will continue empty.
Example 1:
Input: s = "ab#c", t = "ad#c"
Output: true
Explanation: Both s and t become "ac".
Example 2:
Input: s = "ab##", t = "c#d#"
Output: true
Explanation: Both s and t become "".
Example 3:
Input: s = "a#c", t = "b"
Output: false
Explanation: s becomes "c" while t becomes "b".
Constraints:
•
1 <= s.length, t.length <= 200•
s and t only contain lowercase letters and '#' characters.Follow up: Can you solve it in
O(n) time and O(1) space?2022-05-02
905. Sort Array By Parity
Topic: Array, Two Pointers, Sorting
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Given an integer array
Return any array that satisfies this condition.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Constraints:
•
•
905. Sort Array By Parity
Topic: Array, Two Pointers, Sorting
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Given an integer array
nums, move all the even integers at the beginning of the array followed by all the odd integers.Return any array that satisfies this condition.
Example 1:
Input: nums = [3,1,2,4]
Output: [2,4,3,1]
Explanation: The outputs [4,2,3,1], [2,4,1,3], and [4,2,1,3] would also be accepted.
Example 2:
Input: nums = [0]
Output: [0]
Constraints:
•
1 <= nums.length <= 5000•
0 <= nums[i] <= 50002022-05-03
581. Shortest Unsorted Continuous Subarray
Topic: Array, Two Pointers, Stack, Greedy, Sorting, Monotonic Stack
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Given an integer array
Return the shortest such subarray and output its length.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
•
•
Follow up: Can you solve it in
581. Shortest Unsorted Continuous Subarray
Topic: Array, Two Pointers, Stack, Greedy, Sorting, Monotonic Stack
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Given an integer array
nums, you need to find one continuous subarray that if you only sort this subarray in ascending order, then the whole array will be sorted in ascending order.Return the shortest such subarray and output its length.
Example 1:
Input: nums = [2,6,4,8,10,9,15]
Output: 5
Explanation: You need to sort [6, 4, 8, 10, 9] in ascending order to make the whole array sorted in ascending order.
Example 2:
Input: nums = [1,2,3,4]
Output: 0
Example 3:
Input: nums = [1]
Output: 0
Constraints:
•
1 <= nums.length <= 10^4•
-10^5 <= nums[i] <= 10^5Follow up: Can you solve it in
O(n) time complexity?2022-05-04
1679. Max Number of K-Sum Pairs
Topic: Array, Hash Table, Two Pointers, Sorting
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given an integer array
In one operation, you can pick two numbers from the array whose sum equals
Return the maximum number of operations you can perform on the array.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Constraints:
•
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1679. Max Number of K-Sum Pairs
Topic: Array, Hash Table, Two Pointers, Sorting
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given an integer array
nums and an integer k.In one operation, you can pick two numbers from the array whose sum equals
k and remove them from the array.Return the maximum number of operations you can perform on the array.
Example 1:
Input: nums = [1,2,3,4], k = 5
Output: 2
Explanation: Starting with nums = [1,2,3,4]:
- Remove numbers 1 and 4, then nums = [2,3]
- Remove numbers 2 and 3, then nums = []
There are no more pairs that sum up to 5, hence a total of 2 operations.
Example 2:
Input: nums = [3,1,3,4,3], k = 6
Output: 1
Explanation: Starting with nums = [3,1,3,4,3]:
- Remove the first two 3's, then nums = [1,4,3]
There are no more pairs that sum up to 6, hence a total of 1 operation.
Constraints:
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1 <= nums.length <= 10^5•
1 <= nums[i] <= 10^9•
1 <= k <= 10^92022-05-05
225. Implement Stack using Queues
Topic: Stack, Design, Queue
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Implement a last-in-first-out (LIFO) stack using only two queues. The implemented stack should support all the functions of a normal stack (
Implement the
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Notes:
• You must use only standard operations of a queue, which means that only
• Depending on your language, the queue may not be supported natively. You may simulate a queue using a list or deque (double-ended queue) as long as you use only a queue's standard operations.
Example 1:
Constraints:
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• At most
• All the calls to
Follow-up: Can you implement the stack using only one queue?
225. Implement Stack using Queues
Topic: Stack, Design, Queue
Difficulty: Easy
Problem:
Implement a last-in-first-out (LIFO) stack using only two queues. The implemented stack should support all the functions of a normal stack (
push, top, pop, and empty).Implement the
MyStack class:•
void push(int x) Pushes element x to the top of the stack.•
int pop() Removes the element on the top of the stack and returns it.•
int top() Returns the element on the top of the stack.•
boolean empty() Returns true if the stack is empty, false otherwise.Notes:
• You must use only standard operations of a queue, which means that only
push to back, peek/pop from front, size and is empty operations are valid.• Depending on your language, the queue may not be supported natively. You may simulate a queue using a list or deque (double-ended queue) as long as you use only a queue's standard operations.
Example 1:
Input
["MyStack", "push", "push", "top", "pop", "empty"]
[[], [1], [2], [], [], []]
Output
[null, null, null, 2, 2, false]
Explanation
MyStack myStack = new MyStack();
myStack.push(1);
myStack.push(2);
myStack.top(); // return 2
myStack.pop(); // return 2
myStack.empty(); // return False
Constraints:
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1 <= x <= 9• At most
100 calls will be made to push, pop, top, and empty.• All the calls to
pop and top are valid.Follow-up: Can you implement the stack using only one queue?
2022-05-06
1209. Remove All Adjacent Duplicates in String II
Topic: String, Stack
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given a string
We repeatedly make
Return the final string after all such duplicate removals have been made. It is guaranteed that the answer is unique.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
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1209. Remove All Adjacent Duplicates in String II
Topic: String, Stack
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given a string
s and an integer k, a k duplicate removal consists of choosing k adjacent and equal letters from s and removing them, causing the left and the right side of the deleted substring to concatenate together.We repeatedly make
k duplicate removals on s until we no longer can.Return the final string after all such duplicate removals have been made. It is guaranteed that the answer is unique.
Example 1:
Input: s = "abcd", k = 2
Output: "abcd"
Explanation: There's nothing to delete.
Example 2:
Input: s = "deeedbbcccbdaa", k = 3
Output: "aa"
Explanation:
First delete "eee" and "ccc", get "ddbbbdaa"
Then delete "bbb", get "dddaa"
Finally delete "ddd", get "aa"
Example 3:
Input: s = "pbbcggttciiippooaais", k = 2
Output: "ps"
Constraints:
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1 <= s.length <= 10^5•
2 <= k <= 10^4•
s only contains lower case English letters.2022-05-07
456. 132 Pattern
Topic: Array, Binary Search, Stack, Monotonic Stack, Ordered Set
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Given an array of
Return
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
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456. 132 Pattern
Topic: Array, Binary Search, Stack, Monotonic Stack, Ordered Set
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Given an array of
n integers nums, a 132 pattern is a subsequence of three integers nums[i], nums[j] and nums[k] such that i < j < k and nums[i] < nums[k] < nums[j].Return
true if there is a 132 pattern in nums, otherwise, return false.Example 1:
Input: nums = [1,2,3,4]
Output: false
Explanation: There is no 132 pattern in the sequence.
Example 2:
Input: nums = [3,1,4,2]
Output: true
Explanation: There is a 132 pattern in the sequence: [1, 4, 2].
Example 3:
Input: nums = [-1,3,2,0]
Output: true
Explanation: There are three 132 patterns in the sequence: [-1, 3, 2], [-1, 3, 0] and [-1, 2, 0].
Constraints:
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n == nums.length•
1 <= n <= 2 * 10^5•
-10^9 <= nums[i] <= 10^92022-05-08
341. Flatten Nested List Iterator
Topic: Stack, Tree, Depth-First Search, Design, Queue, Iterator
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given a nested list of integers
Implement the
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Your code will be tested with the following pseudocode:
If
Example 1:
Example 2:
Constraints:
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• The values of the integers in the nested list is in the range
341. Flatten Nested List Iterator
Topic: Stack, Tree, Depth-First Search, Design, Queue, Iterator
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
You are given a nested list of integers
nestedList. Each element is either an integer or a list whose elements may also be integers or other lists. Implement an iterator to flatten it.Implement the
NestedIterator class:•
NestedIterator(List<NestedInteger> nestedList) Initializes the iterator with the nested list nestedList.•
int next() Returns the next integer in the nested list.•
boolean hasNext() Returns true if there are still some integers in the nested list and false otherwise.Your code will be tested with the following pseudocode:
initialize iterator with nestedList
res = []
while iterator.hasNext()
append iterator.next() to the end of res
return res
If
res matches the expected flattened list, then your code will be judged as correct.Example 1:
Input: nestedList = [[1,1],2,[1,1]]
Output: [1,1,2,1,1]
Explanation: By calling next repeatedly until hasNext returns false, the order of elements returned by next should be: [1,1,2,1,1].
Example 2:
Input: nestedList = [1,[4,[6]]]
Output: [1,4,6]
Explanation: By calling next repeatedly until hasNext returns false, the order of elements returned by next should be: [1,4,6].
Constraints:
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1 <= nestedList.length <= 500• The values of the integers in the nested list is in the range
[-10^6, 10^6].2022-05-09
17. Letter Combinations of a Phone Number
Topic: Hash Table, String, Backtracking
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Given a string containing digits from
A mapping of digit to letters (just like on the telephone buttons) is given below. Note that 1 does not map to any letters.
Image: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/73/Telephone-keypad2.svg/200px-Telephone-keypad2.svg.png
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
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17. Letter Combinations of a Phone Number
Topic: Hash Table, String, Backtracking
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Given a string containing digits from
2-9 inclusive, return all possible letter combinations that the number could represent. Return the answer in any order.A mapping of digit to letters (just like on the telephone buttons) is given below. Note that 1 does not map to any letters.
Image: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/73/Telephone-keypad2.svg/200px-Telephone-keypad2.svg.png
Example 1:
Input: digits = "23"
Output: ["ad","ae","af","bd","be","bf","cd","ce","cf"]
Example 2:
Input: digits = ""
Output: []
Example 3:
Input: digits = "2"
Output: ["a","b","c"]
Constraints:
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0 <= digits.length <= 4•
digits[i] is a digit in the range ['2', '9'].2022-05-10
216. Combination Sum III
Topic: Array, Backtracking
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Find all valid combinations of
• Only numbers
• Each number is used at most once.
Return a list of all possible valid combinations. The list must not contain the same combination twice, and the combinations may be returned in any order.
Example 1:
Example 2:
Example 3:
Constraints:
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216. Combination Sum III
Topic: Array, Backtracking
Difficulty: Medium
Problem:
Find all valid combinations of
k numbers that sum up to n such that the following conditions are true:• Only numbers
1 through 9 are used.• Each number is used at most once.
Return a list of all possible valid combinations. The list must not contain the same combination twice, and the combinations may be returned in any order.
Example 1:
Input: k = 3, n = 7
Output: [[1,2,4]]
Explanation:
1 + 2 + 4 = 7
There are no other valid combinations.
Example 2:
Input: k = 3, n = 9
Output: [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[2,3,4]]
Explanation:
1 + 2 + 6 = 9
1 + 3 + 5 = 9
2 + 3 + 4 = 9
There are no other valid combinations.
Example 3:
Input: k = 4, n = 1
Output: []
Explanation: There are no valid combinations.
Using 4 different numbers in the range [1,9], the smallest sum we can get is 1+2+3+4 = 10 and since 10 > 1, there are no valid combination.
Constraints:
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2 <= k <= 9•
1 <= n <= 60