Backtracking-401. Binary Watch

A binary watch has 4 LEDs on the top which represent the hours (0-11), and the 6 LEDs on the bottom represent the minutes (0-59).

Each LED represents a zero or one, with the least significant bit on the right.

For example, the above binary watch reads "3:25".

Given a non-negative integer n which represents the number of LEDs that are currently on, return all possible times the watch could represent.

Example:

Input: n = 1
Return: ["1:00", "2:00", "4:00", "8:00", "0:01", "0:02", "0:04", "0:08", "0:16", "0:32"]

 

Note:

  • The order of output does not matter.
  • The hour must not contain a leading zero, for example "01:00" is not valid, it should be "1:00".
  • The minute must be consist of two digits and may contain a leading zero, for example "10:2" is not valid, it should be "10:02".
class Solution {  
public:  
    void DFS(int len, int k, int curIndex, int val, vector<int>& vec)  
    {  
        if(k==0 && len==4 && val < 12) vec.push_back(val);  
        if(k==0 && len==6 && val < 60) vec.push_back(val);  
        if(curIndex == len || k == 0) return;  
        DFS(len, k, curIndex+1, val, vec);  
        val += pow(2, curIndex), k--, curIndex++;  
        DFS(len, k, curIndex, val, vec);  
    }  
      
    vector<string> readBinaryWatch(int num) {  
        vector<string> ans;  
        for(int i = max(0, num-6); i <= min(4, num); i++)  
        {  
            vector<int> vec1, vec2;  
            DFS(4, i, 0, 0, vec1), DFS(6, num-i, 0, 0, vec2);  
            for(auto val1: vec1)  
                for(auto val2: vec2)   
                {  
                    string str = (to_string(val2).size()==1?"0":"") + to_string(val2);  
                    ans.push_back(to_string(val1)+":"+ str);  
                }  
        }  
        return ans;  
    }  
};  

 

posted @ 2018-01-13 02:20  抒抒说  阅读(138)  评论(0)    收藏  举报