Search in Rotated Sorted Array - Faster than 100% -- Rotation pivot using binary search
Problem Statement:
There is an integer array nums
sorted in ascending order (with distinct values).
Prior to being passed to your function, nums
is possibly rotated at an unknown pivot index k
(1 <= k < nums.length
) such that the resulting array is [nums[k], nums[k+1], ..., nums[n-1], nums[0], nums[1], ..., nums[k-1]]
(0-indexed). For example, [0,1,2,4,5,6,7]
might be rotated at pivot index 3
and become [4,5,6,7,0,1,2]
.
Given the array nums
after the possible rotation and an integer target
, return the index of target
if it is in nums
, or -1
if it is not in nums
.
You must write an algorithm with O(log n)
runtime complexity.
Example 1:
Input: nums = [4,5,6,7,0,1,2], target = 0 Output: 4
Example 2:
Input: nums = [4,5,6,7,0,1,2], target = 3 Output: -1
Example 3:
Input: nums = [1], target = 0 Output: -1
Constraints:
1 <= nums.length <= 5000
-104 <= nums[i] <= 104
- All values of
nums
are unique. nums
is an ascending array that is possibly rotated.-104 <= target <= 104
Solution:
Firstly find the pivot of rotation (reference). Then find out which side the target would lie wrt pivot and search in that side.
class Solution {
public:
int countRotations(vector<int>& nums)
{
int n=nums.size(), lo=0, hi=n-1, mid;
while (lo<=hi)
{
mid = lo + (hi-lo)/2;
int prev = (mid-1+n)%n, next = (mid+1)%n;
if (nums[mid]<=nums[prev] && nums[mid]<=nums[next])
break;
else if (nums[mid] <= nums[hi])
hi = mid-1;
else
lo = mid+1; // nums[mid]>=nums[0]
}
return mid;
}
int search(vector<int>& nums, int target)
{
int pivot = countRotations(nums);
vector<int>::iterator it;
if (target < nums[0] || pivot==0)
it = lower_bound(nums.begin()+pivot, nums.end(), target);
else
it = lower_bound(nums.begin(), nums.begin()+pivot, target);
if (it==nums.end()) return -1;
if (*it==target) return it-nums.begin();
return -1;
}
};
TC: O(log(N))
SC: O(1)
Runtime: 0 ms, faster than 100.00% of C++ online submissions for Search in Rotated Sorted Array.
Memory Usage: 11.9 MB, less than 28.90% of C++ online submissions for Search in Rotated Sorted Array.