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 correspondingvaluei
. - 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
andvaluei
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​
- Create a hash map from the knowledge array.
- Initialize a result string.
- 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.
- Continue until the entire string is processed.
Code in Different Languages​
- C++
- Java
- Python
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;
}
};
class Solution {
public String evaluate(String s, List<List<String>> knowledge) {
Map<String, String> map = new HashMap<>();
for (List<String> pair : knowledge) {
map.put(pair.get(0), pair.get(1));
}
StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder();
int i = 0;
while (i < s.length()) {
if (s.charAt(i) == '(') {
int j = i + 1;
while (s.charAt(j) != ')') j++;
String key = s.substring(i + 1, j);
result.append(map.getOrDefault(key, "?"));
i = j + 1;
} else {
result.append(s.charAt(i++));
}
}
return result.toString();
}
}
class Solution:
def evaluate(self, s: str, knowledge: List[List[str]]) -> str:
knowledge_dict = {key: value for key, value in knowledge}
result = []
i = 0
while i < len(s):
if s[i] == '(':
j = i + 1
while s[j] != ')':
j += 1
key = s[i + 1:j]
result.append(knowledge_dict.get(key, "?"))
i = j + 1
else:
result.append(s[i])
i += 1
return ''.join(result)
Complexity Analysis​
- Time Complexity: , where
n
is the length of the strings
andm
is the number of key-value pairs inknowledge
. - Space Complexity: , for storing the hash map of knowledge.
Authors: