Description
https://leetcode.com/problems/number-of-islands-ii/
You are given an empty 2D binary grid grid
of size m x n
. The grid represents a map where 0
‘s represent water and 1
‘s represent land. Initially, all the cells of grid
are water cells (i.e., all the cells are 0
‘s).
We may perform an add land operation which turns the water at position into a land. You are given an array positions
where positions[i] = [ri, ci]
is the position (ri, ci)
at which we should operate the ith
operation.
Return an array of integers answer
where answer[i]
is the number of islands after turning the cell (ri, ci)
into a land.
An island is surrounded by water and is formed by connecting adjacent lands horizontally or vertically. You may assume all four edges of the grid are all surrounded by water.
Example 1:
Input: m = 3, n = 3, positions = [[0,0],[0,1],[1,2],[2,1]] Output: [1,1,2,3] Explanation: Initially, the 2d grid is filled with water. - Operation #1: addLand(0, 0) turns the water at grid[0][0] into a land. We have 1 island. - Operation #2: addLand(0, 1) turns the water at grid[0][1] into a land. We still have 1 island. - Operation #3: addLand(1, 2) turns the water at grid[1][2] into a land. We have 2 islands. - Operation #4: addLand(2, 1) turns the water at grid[2][1] into a land. We have 3 islands.
Example 2:
Input: m = 1, n = 1, positions = [[0,0]] Output: [1]
Constraints:
1 <= m, n, positions.length <= 104
1 <= m * n <= 104
positions[i].length == 2
0 <= ri < m
0 <= ci < n
Follow up: Could you solve it in time complexity O(k log(mn))
, where k == positions.length
?
Explanation
Use union-find data structure to help solve the problem. Whenever we make a position to island, we also use union-find to link its neighbors so that the next time if we visit any of neighbor positions, we know it belongs to the same island.
Python Solution
class UnionFind:
def __init__(self):
self.father = {}
self.count = 0
def union(self, a, b):
root_a = self.find(a)
root_b = self.find(b)
if root_a == root_b:
return
self.father[root_b] = root_a
self.count -= 1
def find(self, point):
path = []
while point != self.father[point]:
path.append(point)
point = self.father[point]
for p in path:
self.father[p] = point
return point
class Solution:
def numIslands2(self, m: int, n: int, positions: List[List[int]]) -> List[int]:
islands = set()
results = []
union_find = UnionFind()
directions = [[0, 1], [0, -1], [1, 0], [-1, 0]]
for position in positions:
x, y = position[0], position[1]
if (x, y) in islands:
results.append(union_find.count)
continue
islands.add((x, y))
union_find.father[(x, y)] = (x, y)
union_find.count += 1
for dx, dy in directions:
nx, ny = x + dx, y + dy
if (nx, ny) in islands:
union_find.union((x, y), (nx, ny))
results.append(union_find.count)
return results
- Time Complexity: O(m * n + L), where L is the number of operations.
- Space Complexity: O(m *n ).