Given a string, find the first non-repeating character in it and return it's index. If it doesn't exist, return -1
.
Given s = "lintcode"
, return 0
.
Given s = "lovelintcode"
, return 2
.
Solution 1. Two steps' iteration
1. first time iterate through s and create a hash map that maps each unique character to the set of its appearance indices in s.
2. second time iterate through s and return the index of the first character whose apperance set size is 1. return -1 if no such character is found.
1 public class Solution { 2 public int firstUniqChar(String s) { 3 if(s == null || s.length() == 0){ 4 return -1; 5 } 6 HashMap<Character, HashSet<Integer>> map = new HashMap<Character, HashSet<Integer>>(); 7 for(int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++){ 8 if(map.containsKey(s.charAt(i))){ 9 map.get(s.charAt(i)).add(i); 10 } 11 else{ 12 HashSet<Integer> set = new HashSet<Integer>(); 13 set.add(i); 14 map.put(s.charAt(i),set); 15 } 16 } 17 for(int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++){ 18 if(map.get(s.charAt(i)).size() == 1){ 19 return i; 20 } 21 } 22 return -1; 23 } 24 }
Optimization on solution 1
Solution 1 already achieves the BCR since we have to iterate through s at least once.
But we can still optimize on memory usage. In solution 1, no matter what kind of input
we get, we always use O(n) space because the hash map stores all characters' indices.
Instead of keeping an appearance index set for each unique character, we can simply keep
an integer that counts the appearance time of each unique character. Doing this saves
memory usage on average cases. In the worst case that each character is unique, we still will
use O(n) memory.
1 public class Solution { 2 public int firstUniqChar(String s) { 3 if(s == null || s.length() == 0){ 4 return -1; 5 } 6 HashMap<Character, Integer> map = new HashMap<Character, Integer>(); 7 for(int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++){ 8 if(map.containsKey(s.charAt(i))){ 9 map.put(s.charAt(i), map.get(s.charAt(i)) + 1); 10 } 11 else{ 12 map.put(s.charAt(i),1); 13 } 14 } 15 for(int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++){ 16 if(map.get(s.charAt(i)) == 1){ 17 return i; 18 } 19 } 20 return -1; 21 } 22 }
If we can make an assumption about the input string's character set is the ASCII set, then we can reduce
memory usage to O(1).
1 public class Solution { 2 public int firstUniqChar(String s) { 3 int[] alp = new int[256]; 4 char[] arr =s.toCharArray(); 5 for(char c : arr ){ 6 alp[c]++; 7 } 8 for(int i = 0; i < arr.length; i++){ 9 if (alp[arr[i]]==1) return i; 10 } 11 return -1; 12 } 13 }