Skip to content

super30admin/Binary-Search-2

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

8 Commits
 
 

Repository files navigation

Binary-Search-2

Explain your approach in three sentences only at top of your code

Given an array of integers nums sorted in ascending order, find the starting and ending position of a given target value.

Your algorithm's runtime complexity must be in the order of O(log n).

If the target is not found in the array, return [-1, -1].

Example 1:

Input: nums = [5,7,7,8,8,10], target = 8 Output: [3,4] Example 2:

Input: nums = [5,7,7,8,8,10], target = 6 Output: [-1,-1]

Suppose an array sorted in ascending order is rotated at some pivot unknown to you beforehand.

(i.e., [0,1,2,4,5,6,7] might become [4,5,6,7,0,1,2]).

Find the minimum element.

You may assume no duplicate exists in the array.

Example 1: Input: [3,4,5,1,2] Output: 1

Example 2: Input: [4,5,6,7,0,1,2] Output: 0

A peak element is an element that is greater than its neighbors.

Given an input array nums, where nums[i] ≠ nums[i+1], find a peak element and return its index.

The array may contain multiple peaks, in that case return the index to any one of the peaks is fine.

You may imagine that nums[-1] = nums[n] = -∞.

Example 1:

Input: nums = [1,2,3,1] Output: 2 Explanation: 3 is a peak element and your function should return the index number 2. Example 2:

Input: nums = [1,2,1,3,5,6,4] Output: 1 or 5 Explanation: Your function can return either index number 1 where the peak element is 2,

         or index number 5 where the peak element is 6.

Note:

Your solution should be in logarithmic complexity.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published