zoukankan      html  css  js  c++  java
  • Top 10 Algorithms for Coding Interview--reference

    Update History:
    Web Version latest update: 4/6/2014
    PDF Version latest update: 1/16/2014

    The following are top 10 algorithms related topics for coding interviews. As understanding those concepts requires much more effort, this list below only serves as an introduction. They are viewed from a Java perspective and the following topics will be covered: String/Array/Matrix, Linked List, Tree, Heap, Graph, Sorting, Recursion vs. Iteration, Dynamic Programming, Bit Manipulation, Probability, Combinations and Permutations, and other problems that need us to find patterns.

    1. String/Array/Matrix

    First of all, String in Java is a class that contains a char array and other fields and methods. Without code auto-completion of any IDE, the following methods should be remembered.

    toCharArray() //get char array of a String
    Arrays.sort()  //sort an array
    Arrays.toString(char[] a) //convert to string
    charAt(int x) //get a char at the specific index
    length() //string length
    length //array size 
    substring(int beginIndex) 
    substring(int beginIndex, int endIndex)
    Integer.valueOf()//string to integer
    String.valueOf()/integer to string

    Strings/arrays are easy to understand, but questions related to them often require advanced algorithm to solve, such as dynamic programming, recursion, etc.

    Classic problems:
    1) Evaluate Reverse Polish Notation
    2) Longest Palindromic Substring
    3) Word Break
    4) Word Ladder
    5) Median of Two Sorted Arrays
    6) Regular Expression Matching
    7) Merge Intervals
    8) Insert Interval
    9) Two Sum
    9) 3Sum
    9) 4Sum
    10) 3Sum Closest
    11) String to Integer
    12) Merge Sorted Array
    13) Valid Parentheses
    14) Implement strStr()
    15) Set Matrix Zeroes
    16) Search Insert Position
    17) Longest Consecutive Sequence
    18) Valid Palindrome
    19) Spiral Matrix
    20) Search a 2D Matrix
    21) Rotate Image
    22) Triangle
    23) Distinct Subsequences Total
    24) Maximum Subarray
    25) Remove Duplicates from Sorted Array
    26) Remove Duplicates from Sorted Array II
    27) Longest Substring Without Repeating Characters
    28) Longest Substring that contains 2 unique characters
    29) Palindrome Partitioning

    2. Linked List

    The implementation of a linked list is pretty simple in Java. Each node has a value and a link to next node.

    class Node {
    	int val;
    	Node next;
     
    	Node(int x) {
    		val = x;
    		next = null;
    	}
    }

    Two popular applications of linked list are stack and queue.

    Stack

    class Stack{
    	Node top; 
     
    	public Node peek(){
    		if(top != null){
    			return top;
    		}
     
    		return null;
    	}
     
    	public Node pop(){
    		if(top == null){
    			return null;
    		}else{
    			Node temp = new Node(top.val);
    			top = top.next;
    			return temp;	
    		}
    	}
     
    	public void push(Node n){
    		if(n != null){
    			n.next = top;
    			top = n;
    		}
    	}
    }

    Queue

    class Queue{
    	Node first, last;
     
    	public void enqueue(Node n){
    		if(first == null){
    			first = n;
    			last = first;
    		}else{
    			last.next = n;
    			last = n;
    		}
    	}
     
    	public Node dequeue(){
    		if(first == null){
    			return null;
    		}else{
    			Node temp = new Node(first.val);
    			first = first.next;
    			return temp;
    		}	
    	}
    }

    It is worth to mention that Java standard library already contains a class called “Stack“, and LinkedListcan be used as a Queue (add() and remove()). (LinkedList implements the Queue interface) If you need a stack or queue to solve problems during your interview, you can directly use them.

    Classic Problems:
    1) Add Two Numbers
    2) Reorder List
    3) Linked List Cycle
    4) Copy List with Random Pointer
    5) Merge Two Sorted Lists
    6) Merge k Sorted Lists *
    7) Remove Duplicates from Sorted List
    8) Partition List
    9) LRU Cache




    3. Tree & Heap

    Tree here is normally binary tree. Each node contains a left node and right node like the following:

    class TreeNode{
    	int value;
    	TreeNode left;
    	TreeNode right;
    }

    Here are some concepts related with trees:

    1. Binary Search Tree: for all nodes, left children <= current node <= right children
    2. Balanced vs. Unbalanced: In a balanced tree, the depth of the left and right subtrees of every node differ by 1 or less.
    3. Full Binary Tree: every node other than the leaves has two children.
    4. Perfect Binary Tree: a full binary tree in which all leaves are at the same depth or same level, and in which every parent has two children.
    5. Complete Binary Tree: a binary tree in which every level, except possibly the last, is completely filled, and all nodes are as far left as possible

    Heap is a specialized tree-based data structure that satisfies the heap property. The time complexity of its operations are important (e.g., find-min, delete-min, insert, etc). In Java, PriorityQueue is important to know.

    Classic problems:
    1) Binary Tree Preorder Traversal 
    2) Binary Tree Inorder Traversal
    3) Binary Tree Postorder Traversal
    4) Word Ladder
    5) Validate Binary Search Tree
    6) Flatten Binary Tree to Linked List
    7) Path Sum
    8) Construct Binary Tree from Inorder and Postorder Traversal
    9) Convert Sorted Array to Binary Search Tree
    10) Convert Sorted List to Binary Search Tree
    11) Minimum Depth of Binary Tree
    12) Binary Tree Maximum Path Sum *
    13) Balanced Binary Tree

    4. Graph

    Graph related questions mainly focus on depth first search and breath first search. Depth first search is straightforward, you can just loop through neighbors starting from the root node.

    Below is a simple implementation of a graph and breath first search. The key is using a queue to store nodes.

    breath-first-search

    1) Define a GraphNode

    class GraphNode{ 
    	int val;
    	GraphNode next;
    	GraphNode[] neighbors;
    	boolean visited;
     
    	GraphNode(int x) {
    		val = x;
    	}
     
    	GraphNode(int x, GraphNode[] n){
    		val = x;
    		neighbors = n;
    	}
     
    	public String toString(){
    		return "value: "+ this.val; 
    	}
    }

    2) Define a Queue

    class Queue{
    	GraphNode first, last;
     
    	public void enqueue(GraphNode n){
    		if(first == null){
    			first = n;
    			last = first;
    		}else{
    			last.next = n;
    			last = n;
    		}
    	}
     
    	public GraphNode dequeue(){
    		if(first == null){
    			return null;
    		}else{
    			GraphNode temp = new GraphNode(first.val, first.neighbors);
    			first = first.next;
    			return temp;
    		}	
    	}
    }

    3) Breath First Search uses a Queue

    public class GraphTest {
     
    	public static void main(String[] args) {
    		GraphNode n1 = new GraphNode(1); 
    		GraphNode n2 = new GraphNode(2); 
    		GraphNode n3 = new GraphNode(3); 
    		GraphNode n4 = new GraphNode(4); 
    		GraphNode n5 = new GraphNode(5); 
     
    		n1.neighbors = new GraphNode[]{n2,n3,n5};
    		n2.neighbors = new GraphNode[]{n1,n4};
    		n3.neighbors = new GraphNode[]{n1,n4,n5};
    		n4.neighbors = new GraphNode[]{n2,n3,n5};
    		n5.neighbors = new GraphNode[]{n1,n3,n4};
     
    		breathFirstSearch(n1, 5);
    	}
     
    	public static void breathFirstSearch(GraphNode root, int x){
    		if(root.val == x)
    			System.out.println("find in root");
     
    		Queue queue = new Queue();
    		root.visited = true;
    		queue.enqueue(root);
     
    		while(queue.first != null){
    			GraphNode c = (GraphNode) queue.dequeue();
    			for(GraphNode n: c.neighbors){
     
    				if(!n.visited){
    					System.out.print(n + " ");
    					n.visited = true;
    					if(n.val == x)
    						System.out.println("Find "+n);
    					queue.enqueue(n);
    				}
    			}
    		}
    	}
    }

    Output:

    value: 2 value: 3 value: 5 Find value: 5
    value: 4

    Classic Problems:
    1) Clone Graph

    5. Sorting

    Time complexity of different sorting algorithms. You can go to wiki to see basic idea of them.

    Algorithm Average Time Worst Time Space
    Bubble sort n^2 n^2 1
    Selection sort n^2 n^2 1
    Insertion sort n^2 n^2  
    Quick sort n log(n) n^2  
    Merge sort n log(n) n log(n) depends

    * BinSort, Radix Sort and CountSort use different set of assumptions than the rest, and so they are not “general” sorting methods. (Thanks to Fidel for pointing this out)

    Here are some implementations/demos, and in addition, you may want to check out how Java developers sort in practice.
    1) Mergesort
    2) Quicksort
    3) InsertionSort.

    6. Recursion vs. Iteration

    Recursion should be a built-in thought for programmers. It can be demonstrated by a simple example.

    Question:

    there are n stairs, each time one can climb 1 or 2. How many different ways to climb the stairs?

    Step 1: Finding the relationship before n and n-1.

    To get n, there are only two ways, one 1-stair from n-1 or 2-stairs from n-2. If f(n) is the number of ways to climb to n, then f(n) = f(n-1) + f(n-2)

    Step 2: Make sure the start condition is correct.

    f(0) = 0;
    f(1) = 1;

    public static int f(int n){
    	if(n <= 2) return n;
    	int x = f(n-1) + f(n-2);
    	return x;
    }

    The time complexity of the recursive method is exponential to n. There are a lot of redundant computations.

    f(5)
    f(4) + f(3)
    f(3) + f(2) + f(2) + f(1)
    f(2) + f(1) + f(2) + f(2) + f(1)

    It should be straightforward to convert the recursion to iteration.

    public static int f(int n) {
     
    	if (n <= 2){
    		return n;
    	}
     
    	int first = 1, second = 2;
    	int third = 0;
     
    	for (int i = 3; i <= n; i++) {
    		third = first + second;
    		first = second;
    		second = third;
    	}
     
    	return third;
    }

    For this example, iteration takes less time. You may also want to check out Recursion vs Iteration.

    7. Dynamic Programming

    Dynamic programming is a technique for solving problems with the following properties:

    1. An instance is solved using the solutions for smaller instances.
    2. The solution for a smaller instance might be needed multiple times.
    3. The solutions to smaller instances are stored in a table, so that each smaller instance is solved only once.
    4. Additional space is used to save time.

    
    The problem of climbing steps perfectly fit those 4 properties. Therefore, it can be solve by using dynamic programming.

    public static int[] A = new int[100];
     
    public static int f3(int n) {
    	if (n <= 2)
    		A[n]= n;
     
    	if(A[n] > 0)
    		return A[n];
    	else
    		A[n] = f3(n-1) + f3(n-2);//store results so only calculate once!
    	return A[n];
    }

    Classic problems:
    1) Edit Distance
    2) Longest Palindromic Substring
    3) Word Break
    4) Maximum Subarray

    8. Bit Manipulation

    Bit operators:

    OR (|) AND (&) XOR (^) Left Shift (<<) Right Shift (>>) Not (~)
    1|0=1 1&0=0 1^0=1 0010<<2=1000 1100>>2=0011 ~1=0

    Get bit i for a give number n. (i count from 0 and starts from right)

    public static boolean getBit(int num, int i){
    	int result = num & (1<<i);
     
    	if(result == 0){
    		return false;
    	}else{
    		return true;
    	}
    }

    For example, get second bit of number 10.

    i=1, n=10
    1<<1= 10
    1010&10=10
    10 is not 0, so return true;

    Classic Problems:
    1) Find Single Number
    2) Maximum Binary Gap

    9. Probability

    Solving probability related questions normally requires formatting the problem well. Here is just a simple example of such kind of problems.

    There are 50 people in a room, what’s the probability that two people have the same birthday? (Ignoring the fact of leap year, i.e., 365 day every year)

    Very often calculating probability of something can be converted to calculate the opposite. In this example, we can calculate the probability that all people have unique birthdays. That is: 365/365 * 364/365 * 363/365 * … * 365-n/365 * … * 365-49/365. And the probability that at least two people have the same birthday would be 1 – this value.

    public static double caculateProbability(int n){
    	double x = 1; 
     
    	for(int i=0; i<n; i++){
    		x *=  (365.0-i)/365.0;
    	}
     
    	double pro = Math.round((1-x) * 100);
    	return pro/100;
    }

    calculateProbability(50) = 0.97

    10. Combinations and Permutations

    The difference between combination and permutation is whether order matters.

    Example 1:

    Given 5 numbers – 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, print out different sequence of the 5 numbers. 4 can not be the third one, 3 and 5 can not be adjacent. How many different combinations?

    Example 2:

    Given 5 banaba, 4 pear, and 3 apple, assuming one kind of fruit are the same, how many different combinations?

    Class Problems:
    1) Permutations
    2) Permutations II 
    3) Permutation Sequence

    11. Others

    Other problems need us to use observations to form rules to solve them.

    Classic problems:
    1) Reverse Integer
    2) Palindrome Number
    3) Pow(x,n)
    4) Subsets
    5) Subsets II

    References/Recommended Materials:
    1. Binary tree
    2. Introduction to Dynamic Programming
    3. UTSA Dynamic Programming slides
    4. Birthday paradox
    5. Cracking the Coding Interview: 150 Programming InterviewQuestions and Solutions, Gayle Laakmann McDowell
    6. Counting sort
    7. LeetCode Online Judge

     reference:http://www.programcreek.com/2012/11/top-10-algorithms-for-coding-interview/

  • 相关阅读:
    IO流
    myEclipse的使用
    单例模式
    日期的使用
    String类的常用方法
    break、continue和return的区别
    包装类和随机数
    enum类的使用
    Java基础概念性的知识总结
    汇编中的函数调用与递归
  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/davidwang456/p/3658219.html
Copyright © 2011-2022 走看看