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Evaluate the Bracket Pairs of a String

Problem Description​

You are given a string s that contains some bracket pairs, with each pair containing a non-empty key.

For example, in the string "(name)is(age)yearsold", there are two bracket pairs that contain the keys "name" and "age". You know the values of a wide range of keys. This is represented by a 2D string array knowledge where each knowledge[i] = [keyi, valuei] indicates that key keyi has a value of valuei.

You are tasked to evaluate all of the bracket pairs. When you evaluate a bracket pair that contains some key keyi, you will:

  • Replace keyi and the bracket pair with the key's corresponding valuei.
  • If you do not know the value of the key, you will replace keyi and the bracket pair with a question mark "?" (without the quotation marks).

Each key will appear at most once in your knowledge. There will not be any nested brackets in s.

Return the resulting string after evaluating all of the bracket pairs.

Examples​

Example 1:

Input: s = "(name)is(age)yearsold", knowledge = [["name","bob"],["age","two"]]
Output: "bobistwoyearsold"
Explanation:
The key "name" has a value of "bob", so replace "(name)" with "bob".
The key "age" has a value of "two", so replace "(age)" with "two".

Example 2:

Input: s = "hi(name)", knowledge = [["a","b"]]
Output: "hi?"
Explanation: As you do not know the value of the key "name", replace "(name)" with "?".

Example 3:

Input: s = "(a)(a)(a)aaa", knowledge = [["a","yes"]]
Output: "yesyesyesaaa"
Explanation: The same key can appear multiple times.
The key "a" has a value of "yes", so replace all occurrences of "(a)" with "yes".
Notice that the "a"s not in a bracket pair are not evaluated.

Constraints​

  • 1 <= s.length <= 10^5
  • 0 <= knowledge.length <= 10^5
  • knowledge[i].length == 2
  • 1 <= keyi.length, valuei.length <= 10
  • s consists of lowercase English letters and round brackets '(' and ')'.
  • Every open bracket '(' in s will have a corresponding close bracket ')'.
  • The key in each bracket pair of s will be non-empty.
  • There will not be any nested bracket pairs in s.
  • keyi and valuei consist of lowercase English letters.
  • Each keyi in knowledge is unique.

Solution for Evaluate Bracket Pairs Problem​

To solve this problem, we need to use a hash map to store the key-value pairs from the knowledge array. Then, we can iterate through the string s and build the resulting string by replacing the keys within brackets with their corresponding values from the hash map.

Approach​

  1. Create a hash map from the knowledge array.
  2. Initialize a result string.
  3. Traverse the string s:
    • If we encounter a '(', start collecting the key until we find a ')'.
    • Replace the key with its value from the hash map, or '?' if the key is not found.
  4. Continue until the entire string is processed.

Code in Different Languages​

Written by @ImmidiSivani
class Solution {
public:
string evaluate(string s, vector<vector<string>>& knowledge) {
unordered_map<string, string> map;
for (auto& pair : knowledge) {
map[pair[0]] = pair[1];
}

string result;
int i = 0;
while (i < s.size()) {
if (s[i] == '(') {
int j = i + 1;
while (s[j] != ')') j++;
string key = s.substr(i + 1, j - i - 1);
result += map.count(key) ? map[key] : "?";
i = j + 1;
} else {
result += s[i++];
}
}
return result;
}
};

Complexity Analysis​

  • Time Complexity: O(n+m)O(n + m), where n is the length of the string s and m is the number of key-value pairs in knowledge.
  • Space Complexity: O(m)O(m), for storing the hash map of knowledge.

Authors:

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