1460. Make Two Arrays Equal by Reversing Sub-arrays
Easy
Given two integer arrays of equal length target
and arr
.
In one step, you can select any non-empty sub-array of arr
and reverse it. You are allowed to make any number of steps.
Return True if you can make arr
equal to target
, or False otherwise.
Example 1:
Input: target = [1,2,3,4], arr = [2,4,1,3] Output: true Explanation: You can follow the next steps to convert arr to target: 1- Reverse sub-array [2,4,1], arr becomes [1,4,2,3] 2- Reverse sub-array [4,2], arr becomes [1,2,4,3] 3- Reverse sub-array [4,3], arr becomes [1,2,3,4] There are multiple ways to convert arr to target, this is not the only way to do so.
Example 2:
Input: target = [7], arr = [7] Output: true Explanation: arr is equal to target without any reverses.
Example 3:
Input: target = [1,12], arr = [12,1] Output: true
Example 4:
Input: target = [3,7,9], arr = [3,7,11] Output: false Explanation: arr doesn't have value 9 and it can never be converted to target.
Example 5:
Input: target = [1,1,1,1,1], arr = [1,1,1,1,1] Output: true
Constraints:
target.length == arr.length
1 <= target.length <= 1000
1 <= target[i] <= 1000
1 <= arr[i] <= 1000
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 | class Solution { public boolean canBeEqual(int[] target, int[] arr) { Map<Integer, Integer> map = new HashMap<>(); for(int i : target) map.put(i, map.getOrDefault(i, 0)+1); for(int i : arr) map.put(i, map.getOrDefault(i, 0)-1); for(int k : map.keySet()){ if(map.get(k)!=0) return false; } return true; } } |
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