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Programming Articles
Page 1347 of 2547
Interesting facts about Increment and Decrement operators in Java
There are many interesting facts with respect to increment and decrement operators in Java. We will discuss a few of them with examples −The increment and decrement operators can’t be used with the ‘final’ variables. This is due to the fact that variables associated with ‘final’ keyword can’t be changed −Examplepublic class Demo{ public static void main(String[] args){ final int my_val = 34; int my_val_2 = ++my_val; System.out.println("The value is :"); System.out.println(my_val_2); } }Output/Demo.java:6: error: cannot assign a value to final variable my_val int my_val_2 = ...
Read MoreSuper Egg Drop in C++
Suppose we have given K eggs, and we have a building with N floors from 1 to N. Now each egg is identical in function, and if an egg breaks, we cannot drop it again.There exists a floor F with between 0 and N such that any egg dropped at a floor higher than F will break, and any egg dropped at or below floor F will not break. In each move, we may take an egg and drop it from any floor X. The X is in range 1 to N.Our goal is to know with certainty what the ...
Read MoreSum of Subsequence Widths in C++
Suppose we have an array A of integers, consider all non-empty subsequences of A. For any sequence S, consider the width of S be the difference between the maximum and minimum element of S. We have to find the sum of the widths of all subsequences of A. The answer may be very large, so return the answer modulo 10^9 + 7.So, if the input is like [3, 1, 2], then the output will be 6, this is because the subsequences are like [1], [2], [3], [2, 1], [2, 3], [1, 3], [2, 1, 3] and the widths are 0, ...
Read MoreInteresting facts about null in Java
There are many facts associated with null in Java. We will discuss a few of them here with examples −The default value of any reference variable in Java is always null.Examplepublic class Demo{ private static Object my_obj; public static void main(String args[]){ System.out.println("The default value of object my_obj is : " + my_obj); } }OutputThe default value of object my_obj is : nullA class named Demo defines a static object and the main function that shows the default value of this pre-defined object.The not equal to (!=) and comparison (==) operators can be used ...
Read MoreMaximum Frequency Stack in C++
Suppose we want to implement one stack called FreqStack, Our FreqStack has two functions −push(x), This will push an integer x onto the stack.pop(), This will remove and returns the most frequent element in the stack. If there are more than one elements with same frequency, then the element closest to the top of the stack is removed and returned.So, if the input is like push some elements like 7, 9, 7, 9, 6, 7, then perform the pop operations four times, then the output will be 7, 9, 7, 6 respectively.To solve this, we will follow these steps −Define ...
Read MoreOrderly Queue in C++
Suppose there is a string S. All letters in S are in lowercase. Then, we may make any number of moves.Here, in each move, we choose one of the first K letters, and remove it, and place it at the end of the string. We have to find the lexicographically smallest string we could have after any number of moves.So, if the input is like "cabaa" and K = 3, then the output will be "aaabc"To solve this, we will follow these steps −if K > 1, then −sort the array Sreturn Sret := Sn := size of Sfor initialize ...
Read MoreMinimum Moves to Equal Array Elements in C++
Suppose we have an array of size n, we have to find the minimum number of moves required to make all array elements the same, where a move means incrementing n - 1 elements by 1.So, if the input is like [3, 2, 3, 4], then the output will be 4.To solve this, we will follow these steps −n := size of numsif n is same as 0, then −return 0sort the array numsans := 0for initialize i := 0, when i < n, update (increase i by 1), do −ans := ans + nums[i] - nums[0]return ansExample Let us see ...
Read MoreNumbers At Most N Given Digit Set in C++
Suppose we have one sorted set of digits D, a non-empty subset of {'1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9'} except 0. Now, we will write some numbers using these digits, using each digit as many times as we want. So, if D = {'2', '3', '7'}, we may write numbers such as '23', '771', '2372327'.Now we have to find the number of positive integers that can be written that are less than or equal to N.So, if the input is like D = [2, 3, 4, 7], N = 100, then the output will be 20, as ...
Read MoreAssign Cookies in C++
Suppose we are trying to distribute some cookies to children. But, we should give each child at most one cookie. Now each child i has a greed factor gi, which is the minimum size of a cookie that the child will be content with; and each cookie j has a size sj. When sj >= gi, we can assign the cookie j to the child i, and the child i will be content. Our goal is to maximize the number of content children and output the maximum number.So, if the input is like [1, 2], [1, 2, 3], then the ...
Read MoreValid Permutations for DI Sequence in C++
Suppose we have a string S. This is a string of characters from the set {'D', 'I'}. (D means "decreasing" and I means "increasing")Now consider a valid permutation is a permutation P[0], P[1], ..., P[n] of integers {0 to n}, such that for all i, it meets these rules:If S[i] == 'D', then P[i] > P[i+1];Otherwise when S[i] == 'I', then P[i] < P[i+1].We have to find how many valid permutations are there? The answer may be very large, so we will return using mod 10^9 + 7.So, if the input is like "IDD", then the output will be 3, ...
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