For a binary tree T, we can define a flip operation as follows: choose any node, and swap the left and right child subtrees.
A binary tree X is flip equivalent to a binary tree Y if and only if we can make X equal to Y after some number of flip operations.
Given the roots of two binary trees root1
and root2
, return true
if the two trees are flip equivelent or false
otherwise.
Example 1:
Input: root1 = [1,2,3,4,5,6,null,null,null,7,8], root2 = [1,3,2,null,6,4,5,null,null,null,null,8,7] Output: true Explanation: We flipped at nodes with values 1, 3, and 5.
Example 2:
Input: root1 = [], root2 = [] Output: true
Example 3:
Input: root1 = [], root2 = [1] Output: false
Example 4:
Input: root1 = [0,null,1], root2 = [] Output: false
Example 5:
Input: root1 = [0,null,1], root2 = [0,1] Output: true
Solution #1
# Definition for a binary tree node.
# class TreeNode:
# def __init__(self, val=0, left=None, right=None):
# self.val = val
# self.left = left
# self.right = right
class Solution:
def flipEquiv(self, root1: TreeNode, root2: TreeNode) -> bool:
if root1 is root2:
return True
if not root1 or not root2 or root1.val != root2.val:
return False
return self.flipEquiv(root1.left,root2.left) and self.flipEquiv(root1.right,root2.right) or self.flipEquiv(root1.left,root2.right) and self.flipEquiv(root1.right,root2.left)
Aproach #2
# Definition for a binary tree node.
# class TreeNode:
# def __init__(self, val=0, left=None, right=None):
# self.val = val
# self.left = left
# self.right = right
class Solution:
def flipEquiv(self, root1, root2):
def dfs(node):
if node:
yield node.val
L = node.left.val if node.left else -1
R = node.right.val if node.right else -1
if L < R:
yield from dfs(node.left)
yield from dfs(node.right)
else:
yield from dfs(node.right)
yield from dfs(node.left)
yield '#'
return all(x==y for x,y in itertools.zip_longest(dfs(root1),dfs(root2)))
TC: O(min(n1,n2)) SC:O(min(H1,H2)) h1,h2 heights of treees.
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