Given a singly linked list where elements are sorted in ascending order, convert it to a height balanced BST.
For this problem, a height-balanced binary tree is defined as a binary tree in which the depth of the two subtrees of every node never differ by more than 1.
Example:
Given the sorted linked list: [-10,-3,0,5,9], One possible answer is: [0,-3,9,-10,null,5], which represents the following height balanced BST: 0 / -3 9 / / -10 5
time: O(nlogn) -- O(n) for recursive call, inside each recursive call, O(logn) for finding middle, space: O(logn)
/** * Definition for singly-linked list. * public class ListNode { * int val; * ListNode next; * ListNode(int x) { val = x; } * } */ /** * Definition for a binary tree node. * public class TreeNode { * int val; * TreeNode left; * TreeNode right; * TreeNode(int x) { val = x; } * } */ class Solution { public TreeNode sortedListToBST(ListNode head) { if(head == null) return null; return toBST(head, null); } private TreeNode toBST(ListNode head, ListNode tail) { if(head == tail) return null; ListNode fast = head, slow = head; while(fast.next != tail && fast.next.next != tail) { fast = fast.next.next; slow = slow.next; } TreeNode root = new TreeNode(slow.val); root.left = toBST(head, slow); root.right = toBST(slow.next, tail); return root; } }