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Lonely Pixel I

Problem​

Given an m x n picture consisting of black 'B' and white 'W' pixels, return the number of black lonely pixels.

A black lonely pixel is a character 'B' that located at a specific position where the same row and same column don't have any other black pixels.

Examples​

Example 1:

Input: picture = "[["W","W","B"],["W","B","W"],["B","W","W"]]"
Output: 3
Explanation: All the three 'B's are black lonely pixels.

Example 2:

Input: picture = "[["B","B","B"],["B","B","W"],["B","B","B"]]"
Output: 0

Constraints​

  • m == picture.length
  • n == picture[i].length
  • 1 <= m, n <= 500
  • picture[i][j] is 'W' or 'B'.

Approach​

According to the problem description, we need to count the number of black pixels in each row and column, which are recorded in the arrays rows and cols respectively. Then we traverse each black pixel, check whether there is only one black pixel in its row and column. If so, we increment the answer by one.

Steps:​

  1. Initialize two arrays, rows and cols, to count the number of 'B' pixels in each row and column, respectively.
  2. Iterate through the 2D array to populate the rows and cols arrays with the count of 'B' pixels for each row and column.
  3. Initialize a counter ans to keep track of the number of lonely pixels. Iterate through the 2D array again. For each 'B' pixel, check if it is a lonely pixel by verifying if rows[i] and cols[j] are both equal to 1.
  4. Return the count of lonely pixels.

Solution​

Java Solution​

class Solution {
public int findLonelyPixel(char[][] picture) {
int m = picture.length, n = picture[0].length;
int[] rows = new int[m];
int[] cols = new int[n];
for (int i = 0; i < m; ++i) {
for (int j = 0; j < n; ++j) {
if (picture[i][j] == 'B') {
++rows[i];
++cols[j];
}
}
}
int ans = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < m; ++i) {
for (int j = 0; j < n; ++j) {
if (picture[i][j] == 'B' && rows[i] == 1 && cols[j] == 1) {
++ans;
}
}
}
return ans;
}
}

C++ Solution​

class Solution {
public:
int findLonelyPixel(vector<vector<char>>& picture) {
int m = picture.size(), n = picture[0].size();
vector<int> rows(m);
vector<int> cols(n);
for (int i = 0; i < m; ++i) {
for (int j = 0; j < n; ++j) {
if (picture[i][j] == 'B') {
++rows[i];
++cols[j];
}
}
}
int ans = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < m; ++i) {
for (int j = 0; j < n; ++j) {
if (picture[i][j] == 'B' && rows[i] == 1 && cols[j] == 1) {
++ans;
}
}
}
return ans;
}
};

Python Solution​

class Solution:
def findLonelyPixel(self, picture: List[List[str]]) -> int:
rows = [0] * len(picture)
cols = [0] * len(picture[0])
for i, row in enumerate(picture):
for j, x in enumerate(row):
if x == "B":
rows[i] += 1
cols[j] += 1
ans = 0
for i, row in enumerate(picture):
for j, x in enumerate(row):
if x == "B" and rows[i] == 1 and cols[j] == 1:
ans += 1
return ans

Complexity Analysis​

Time Complexity: O(m x n)

Reason: We iterate over each element in the picture array to count the number of 'B' pixels in each row and column.

Space Complexity: O(m + n)

Reason: We use two additional arrays, rows and cols, each of size mm and nn respectively, to count the number of 'B' pixels in each row and column.

References​

LeetCode Problem: Lonely Pixel I