To some string 
S, we will perform some replacement operations that replace groups of letters with new ones (not necessarily the same size).
Each replacement operation has 
3 parameters: a starting index i, a source word x and a target word y.  The rule is that if x starts at position i in the original string S, then we will replace that occurrence of x with y.  If not, we do nothing.
For example, if we have 
S = "abcd" and we have some replacement operation i = 2, x = "cd", y = "ffff", then because "cd" starts at position 2 in the original string S, we will replace it with "ffff".
Using another example on 
S = "abcd", if we have both the replacement operation i = 0, x = "ab", y = "eee", as well as another replacement operation i = 2, x = "ec", y = "ffff", this second operation does nothing because in the original string S[2] = 'c', which doesn't match x[0] = 'e'.
All these operations occur simultaneously.  It's guaranteed that there won't be any overlap in replacement: for example, 
S = "abc", indexes = [0, 1], sources = ["ab","bc"] is not a valid test case.
Example 1:
Input: S = "abcd", indexes = [0,2], sources = ["a","cd"], targets = ["eee","ffff"] Output: "eeebffff" Explanation: "a" starts at index 0 in S, so it's replaced by "eee". "cd" starts at index 2 in S, so it's replaced by "ffff".
Example 2:
Input: S = "abcd", indexes = [0,2], sources = ["ab","ec"], targets = ["eee","ffff"] Output: "eeecd" Explanation: "ab" starts at index 0 in S, so it's replaced by "eee". "ec" doesn't starts at index 2 in the original S, so we do nothing.
Notes:
0 <= indexes.length = sources.length = targets.length <= 1000 < indexes[i] < S.length <= 1000- All characters in given inputs are lowercase letters.
 
Code (Java):
class Solution {
    public String findReplaceString(String S, int[] indexes, String[] sources, String[] targets) {
        // create tuple and sort
        //
        Tuple[] tuples = new Tuple[indexes.length]; 
        for (int i = 0; i < indexes.length; i++) {
            Tuple tuple = new Tuple(indexes[i], sources[i], targets[i]);
            tuples[i] = tuple;
        }
        Arrays.sort(tuples, new MyTupleComparator());
        
        int prev = 0;
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        for (int i = 0; i < indexes.length; i++) {
            int index = tuples[i].index;
            String source = tuples[i].source;
            String target = tuples[i].target;
            if (S.substring(index, index + source.length()).equals(source)) {
                // prev seg 
                //
                sb.append(S.substring(prev, index));
                // curr seg 
                //
                sb.append(target);
                prev = index + source.length();
            }
        }
        sb.append(S.substring(prev));
        return sb.toString();
    }
}
class Tuple {
    int index;
    String source;
    String target;
    public Tuple( int i, String s, String t) {
        index = i;
        source = s;
        target = t;
    }
}
class MyTupleComparator implements Comparator<Tuple> {
    public int compare(Tuple a, Tuple b) {
        return a.index - b.index;
    }
}
Solution 2:O(n) solution. Use hash map to store the indexes to be replaced.
Code (Java):
class Solution {
    public String findReplaceString(String S, int[] indexes, String[] sources, String[] targets) {
        Map<Integer, Integer> map = new HashMap<>();
        for (int i = 0; i < indexes.length; i++) {
            map.put(indexes[i], i);
        }
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        for (int i = 0; i < S.length(); i++) {
            if (map.containsKey(i)) {
                int index = map.get(i);
                String source = sources[index];
                String target = targets[index];
                
                if (i + source.length() <= S.length() && 
                    S.substring(i, i + source.length()).equals(source)) {
                    sb.append(target);
                    i += source.length() - 1;
                } else {
                    sb.append(S.charAt(i));
                }
            } else {
                sb.append(S.charAt(i));
            }
        }
        return sb.toString();
    }
}
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