Number of Islands - Easy DFS
Problem Statement:
Given an m x n 2D binary grid grid which represents a map of '1's (land) and '0's (water), return the number of islands.
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: grid = [ ["1","1","1","1","0"], ["1","1","0","1","0"], ["1","1","0","0","0"], ["0","0","0","0","0"] ] Output: 1
Example 2:
Input: grid = [ ["1","1","0","0","0"], ["1","1","0","0","0"], ["0","0","1","0","0"], ["0","0","0","1","1"] ] Output: 3
Constraints:
m == grid.lengthn == grid[i].length1 <= m, n <= 300grid[i][j]is'0'or'1'.
Solution:
The idea is to go over all cells and once you see a 1 (land) start exploring its neighborhood and change grid cell value to 2 to avoid double visits. This way you dont need to maintain a visited array.
class Solution {
public:
void dfs(vector<vector<char>>&grid, int i, int j, int m, int n)
{
if(i<0 || i>=m || j<0 || j>=n || grid[i][j]!='1') return;
grid[i][j] = '2';
dfs(grid, i-1, j, m, n);
dfs(grid, i+1, j, m, n);
dfs(grid, i, j-1, m, n);
dfs(grid, i, j+1, m, n);
}
int numIslands(vector<vector<char>>& grid) {
int m = grid.size(), n = grid[0].size();
int res = 0;
for (int i=0; i<m; i++)
{
for (int j=0; j<n; j++)
{
if (grid[i][j]=='1')
{
dfs(grid, i, j, m, n);
res++;
}
}
}
return res;
}
};