Alice had a 0-indexed array arr
consisting of n
positive integers. She chose an arbitrary positive integer k
and created two new 0-indexed integer arrays lower
and higher
in the following manner:
lower[i] = arr[i] - k
, for every indexi
where0 <= i < n
higher[i] = arr[i] + k
, for every indexi
where0 <= i < n
Unfortunately, Alice lost all three arrays. However, she remembers the integers that were present in the arrays lower
and higher
, but not the array each integer belonged to. Help Alice and recover the original array.
Given an array nums
consisting of 2n
integers, where exactly n
of the integers were present in lower
and the remaining in higher
, return the original array arr
. In case the answer is not unique, return any valid array.
Note: The test cases are generated such that there exists at least one valid array arr
.
Input: nums = [2,10,6,4,8,12] Output: [3,7,11] Explanation: If arr = [3,7,11] and k = 1, we get lower = [2,6,10] and higher = [4,8,12]. Combining lower and higher gives us [2,6,10,4,8,12], which is a permutation of nums. Another valid possibility is that arr = [5,7,9] and k = 3. In that case, lower = [2,4,6] and higher = [8,10,12].
Input: nums = [1,1,3,3] Output: [2,2] Explanation: If arr = [2,2] and k = 1, we get lower = [1,1] and higher = [3,3]. Combining lower and higher gives us [1,1,3,3], which is equal to nums. Note that arr cannot be [1,3] because in that case, the only possible way to obtain [1,1,3,3] is with k = 0. This is invalid since k must be positive.
Input: nums = [5,435] Output: [220] Explanation: The only possible combination is arr = [220] and k = 215. Using them, we get lower = [5] and higher = [435].
2 * n == nums.length
1 <= n <= 1000
1 <= nums[i] <= 109
- The test cases are generated such that there exists at least one valid array
arr
.
use std::collections::HashMap;
impl Solution {
pub fn recover_array(nums: Vec<i32>) -> Vec<i32> {
let mut nums = nums;
let mut arr = vec![];
nums.sort_unstable();
for i in 1..nums.len() {
if nums[i] % 2 != nums[0] % 2 || nums[i] == nums[0] {
continue;
}
let k = (nums[i] - nums[0]) / 2;
let mut count = HashMap::from([(nums[0], 1)]);
for j in 1..nums.len() {
if *count.get(&(nums[j] - 2 * k)).unwrap_or(&0) > 0 {
*count.get_mut(&(nums[j] - 2 * k)).unwrap() -= 1;
arr.push(nums[j] - k);
} else {
*count.entry(nums[j]).or_insert(0) += 1;
}
}
if arr.len() * 2 == nums.len() {
return arr;
} else {
arr.clear();
}
}
unreachable!()
}
}