Given a binary tree
struct TreeLinkNode { TreeLinkNode *left; TreeLinkNode *right; TreeLinkNode *next; }
Populate each next pointer to point to its next right node. If there is no next right node, the next pointer should be set to NULL
.
Initially, all next pointers are set to NULL
.
Note:
- You may only use constant extra space.
- Recursive approach is fine, implicit stack space does not count as extra space for this problem.
Example:
Given the following binary tree,
1 / 2 3 / 4 5 7
After calling your function, the tree should look like:
1 -> NULL / 2 -> 3 -> NULL / 4-> 5 -> 7 -> NULL
Approach #1: Java.
/** * Definition for binary tree with next pointer. * public class TreeLinkNode { * int val; * TreeLinkNode left, right, next; * TreeLinkNode(int x) { val = x; } * } */ public class Solution { public void connect(TreeLinkNode root) { TreeLinkNode dummyHead = new TreeLinkNode(0); TreeLinkNode pre = dummyHead; while (root != null) { if (root.left != null) { pre.next = root.left; pre = pre.next; } if (root.right != null) { pre.next = root.right; pre = pre.next; } root = root.next; if (root != null) { pre = dummyHead; root = dummyHead.next; dummyHead.next = null; } } } }
Appraoch #2: Python.
# Definition for binary tree with next pointer. # class TreeLinkNode: # def __init__(self, x): # self.val = x # self.left = None # self.right = None # self.next = None class Solution: # @param root, a tree link node # @return nothing def connect(self, root): tail = dummy = TreeLinkNode(0) while node: tail.next = node.left if tail.next: tail = tail.next tail.next = node.right if tail.next: tail = tail.next node = node.next if not node: tail = dummy node = dummy.next