Given a binary tree, return the bottom-up level order traversal of its nodes' values. (ie, from left to right, level by level from leaf to root).
For example:
Given binary tree {3,9,20,#,#,15,7}
,
3 / 9 20 / 15 7
return its bottom-up level order traversal as:
[ [15,7] [9,20], [3], ]
confused what "{1,#,2,3}"
means? > read more on how binary tree is serialized on OJ.
OJ's Binary Tree Serialization:
The serialization of a binary tree follows a level order traversal, where '#' signifies a path terminator where no node exists below.
Here's an example:
1 / 2 3 / 4 5The above binary tree is serialized as
"{1,2,3,#,#,4,#,#,5}"
.code: 1A 36ms
/** * Definition for binary tree * struct TreeNode { * int val; * TreeNode *left; * TreeNode *right; * TreeNode(int x) : val(x), left(NULL), right(NULL) {} * }; */ class Solution { public: vector<vector<int> > levelOrderBottom(TreeNode *root) { // Note: The Solution object is instantiated only once and is reused by each test case. vector<vector<int> > res; if(root == NULL) return res; queue<TreeNode *> qu; qu.push(root); qu.push(NULL); vector<int> onelevel; while(true) { TreeNode *cur = qu.front(); qu.pop(); if(cur == NULL) { res.push_back(onelevel); onelevel.clear(); if(qu.empty()) break; qu.push(NULL); } else { onelevel.push_back(cur->val); if(cur->left) qu.push(cur->left); if(cur->right) qu.push(cur->right); } } reverse(res.begin(),res.end()); return res; } };