In an alien language, surprisingly, they also use English lowercase letters, but possibly in a different order
. The order
of the alphabet is some permutation of lowercase letters.
Given a sequence of words
written in the alien language, and the order
of the alphabet, return true
if and only if the given words
are sorted lexicographically in this alien language.
Example 1:
Input: words = ["hello","leetcode"], order = "hlabcdefgijkmnopqrstuvwxyz" Output: true Explanation: As 'h' comes before 'l' in this language, then the sequence is sorted.
Example 2:
Input: words = ["word","world","row"], order = "worldabcefghijkmnpqstuvxyz" Output: false Explanation: As 'd' comes after 'l' in this language, then words[0] > words[1], hence the sequence is unsorted.
Example 3:
Input: words = ["apple","app"], order = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz" Output: false Explanation: The first three characters "app" match, and the second string is shorter (in size.) According to lexicographical rules "apple" > "app", because 'l' > '∅', where '∅' is defined as the blank character which is less than any other character (More info).
Constraints:
1 <= words.length <= 100
1 <= words[i].length <= 20
order.length == 26
- All characters in
words[i]
andorder
are English lowercase letters.
class Solution:
def isAlienSorted(self, words: List[str], order: str) -> bool:
m = {c: i for i, c in enumerate(order)}
for i in range(20):
prev = -1
valid = True
for x in words:
curr = -1 if i >= len(x) else m[x[i]]
if prev > curr:
return False
if prev == curr:
valid = False
prev = curr
if valid:
return True
return True
class Solution {
public boolean isAlienSorted(String[] words, String order) {
int[] m = new int[26];
for (int i = 0; i < 26; ++i) {
m[order.charAt(i) - 'a'] = i;
}
for (int i = 0; i < 20; ++i) {
int prev = -1;
boolean valid = true;
for (String x : words) {
int curr = i >= x.length() ? -1 : m[x.charAt(i) - 'a'];
if (prev > curr) {
return false;
}
if (prev == curr) {
valid = false;
}
prev = curr;
}
if (valid) {
break;
}
}
return true;
}
}
class Solution {
public:
bool isAlienSorted(vector<string>& words, string order) {
vector<int> m(26);
for (int i = 0; i < 26; ++i) m[order[i] - 'a'] = i;
for (int i = 0; i < 20; ++i) {
int prev = -1;
bool valid = true;
for (auto& x : words) {
int curr = i >= x.size() ? -1 : m[x[i] - 'a'];
if (prev > curr) return false;
if (prev == curr) valid = false;
prev = curr;
}
if (valid) break;
}
return true;
}
};
func isAlienSorted(words []string, order string) bool {
m := make([]int, 26)
for i, c := range order {
m[c-'a'] = i
}
for i := 0; i < 20; i++ {
prev := -1
valid := true
for _, x := range words {
curr := -1
if i < len(x) {
curr = m[x[i]-'a']
}
if prev > curr {
return false
}
if prev == curr {
valid = false
}
prev = curr
}
if valid {
break
}
}
return true
}
use std::collections::HashMap;
impl Solution {
pub fn is_alien_sorted(words: Vec<String>, order: String) -> bool {
let n = words.len();
let mut map = HashMap::new();
order.as_bytes().iter().enumerate().for_each(|(i, &v)| {
map.insert(v, i);
});
for i in 1..n {
let s1 = words[i - 1].as_bytes();
let s2 = words[i].as_bytes();
let mut is_equal = true;
for i in 0..s1.len().min(s2.len()) {
if map.get(&s1[i]) > map.get(&s2[i]) {
return false;
}
if map.get(&s1[i]) < map.get(&s2[i]) {
is_equal = false;
break;
}
}
if is_equal && s1.len() > s2.len() {
return false;
}
}
true
}
}