Given two strings: s1
and s2
with the same size, check if some permutation of string s1
can break some permutation of string s2
or vice-versa (in other words s2
can break s1
).
A string x
can break string y
(both of size n
) if x[i] >= y[i]
(in alphabetical order) for all i
between 0
and n-1
.
Input: s1 = "abc", s2 = "xya" Output: true Explanation: "ayx" is a permutation of s2="xya" which can break to string "abc" which is a permutation of s1="abc".
Input: s1 = "abe", s2 = "acd" Output: false Explanation: All permutations for s1="abe" are: "abe", "aeb", "bae", "bea", "eab" and "eba" and all permutation for s2="acd" are: "acd", "adc", "cad", "cda", "dac" and "dca". However, there is not any permutation from s1 which can break some permutation from s2 and vice-versa.
Input: s1 = "leetcodee", s2 = "interview" Output: true
s1.length == n
s2.length == n
1 <= n <= 10^5
- All strings consist of lowercase English letters.
impl Solution {
pub fn check_if_can_break(s1: String, s2: String) -> bool {
let mut s1 = s1.into_bytes();
let mut s2 = s2.into_bytes();
s1.sort_unstable();
s2.sort_unstable();
let s1s2 = s1.iter().zip(s2.iter()).collect::<Vec<_>>();
s1s2.iter().all(|tup| tup.0 >= tup.1) || s1s2.iter().all(|tup| tup.0 <= tup.1)
}
}