We are given
head, the head node of a linked list containing unique integer values.
We are also given the list
G, a subset of the values in the linked list.
Return the number of connected components in
G, where two values are connected if they appear consecutively in the linked list.
Example 1:
Input: head: 0->1->2->3 G = [0, 1, 3] Output: 2 Explanation: 0 and 1 are connected, so [0, 1] and [3] are the two connected components.
Example 2:
Input: head: 0->1->2->3->4 G = [0, 3, 1, 4] Output: 2 Explanation: 0 and 1 are connected, 3 and 4 are connected, so [0, 1] and [3, 4] are the two connected components.
Note:
- If
Nis the length of the linked list given byhead,1 <= N <= 10000. - The value of each node in the linked list will be in the range
[0, N - 1]. 1 <= G.length <= 10000.Gis a subset of all values in the linked list.
Analysis:
Scanning through the list, if
node.val is in G and node.next.val isn't (including if node.next is null), then this must be the end of a connected component.
Code (Java):
/**
* Definition for singly-linked list.
* public class ListNode {
* int val;
* ListNode next;
* ListNode(int x) { val = x; }
* }
*/
class Solution {
public int numComponents(ListNode head, int[] G) {
Set<Integer> setG = new HashSet<>();
// insert each number in G into the hash set
//
for (int num : G) {
setG.add(num);
}
int numCC = 0;
// Iterate all nodes in the linked list and get number of cc
//
while (head != null) {
if (setG.contains(head.val) &&
(head.next == null || !setG.contains(head.next.val))) {
numCC++;
}
head = head.next;
}
return numCC;
}
}
No comments:
Post a Comment