71 lines
2 KiB
TypeScript
71 lines
2 KiB
TypeScript
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function findRepeatBruteForce(xs: Array<number>): number {
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// InterviewCake asks us to write a function that optimizes for space. Using
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// brute force, we can write a function that returns an answer using constant
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// (i.e. O(1)) space at the cost of a quadratic (i.e. O(n^2)) runtime.
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//
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// I did not think of this myself; InterviewCake's "Tell me more" hints
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// did. Since I think this idea is clever, I wrote a solution from memory to
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// help me internalize the solution.
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for (let i = 0; i < xs.length; i += 1) {
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let seeking = xs[i];
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for (let j = i + 1; j < xs.length; j += 1) {
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if (xs[j] === seeking) {
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return seeking;
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}
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}
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}
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}
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function findRepeatSort(xs: Array<number>): number {
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// This version first sorts xs, which gives the function a time-complexity of
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// O(n*log(n)), which is better than the quadratic complexity of the
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// brute-force solution. The space requirement here is constant.
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//
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// Since we need to sort xs in-place to avoid paying a O(n) space cost for
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// storing the newly sorted xs, we're mutating our input. InterviewCake
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// advises us to not mutate our input.
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xs.sort();
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let i = 0;
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let j = 1;
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for (; j < xs.length; ) {
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if (xs[i] === xs[j]) {
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return xs[i];
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}
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i += 1;
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j += 1;
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}
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}
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function findRepeat(xs: Array<number>): number {
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return 0;
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}
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// Tests
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let desc = "just the repeated number";
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let actual = findRepeat([1, 1]);
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let expected = 1;
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assertEqual(actual, expected, desc);
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desc = "short array";
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actual = findRepeat([1, 2, 3, 2]);
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expected = 2;
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assertEqual(actual, expected, desc);
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desc = "medium array";
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actual = findRepeat([1, 2, 5, 5, 5, 5]);
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expected = 5;
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assertEqual(actual, expected, desc);
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desc = "long array";
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actual = findRepeat([4, 1, 4, 8, 3, 2, 7, 6, 5]);
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expected = 4;
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assertEqual(actual, expected, desc);
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function assertEqual(a, b, desc) {
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if (a === b) {
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console.log(`${desc} ... PASS`);
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} else {
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console.log(`${desc} ... FAIL: ${a} != ${b}`);
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}
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}
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