java.lang.Object
g1401_1500.s1415_the_k_th_lexicographical_string_of_all_happy_strings_of_length_n.Solution

public class Solution extends Object
1415 - The k-th Lexicographical String of All Happy Strings of Length n.

Medium

A happy string is a string that:

  • consists only of letters of the set ['a', 'b', 'c'].
  • s[i] != s[i + 1] for all values of i from 1 to s.length - 1 (string is 1-indexed).

For example, strings “abc”, “ac”, “b” and “abcbabcbcb” are all happy strings and strings “aa”, “baa” and “ababbc” are not happy strings.

Given two integers n and k, consider a list of all happy strings of length n sorted in lexicographical order.

Return the kth string of this list or return an empty string if there are less than k happy strings of length n.

Example 1:

Input: n = 1, k = 3

Output: “c”

Explanation: The list [“a”, “b”, “c”] contains all happy strings of length 1. The third string is “c”.

Example 2:

Input: n = 1, k = 4

Output: ""

Explanation: There are only 3 happy strings of length 1.

Example 3:

Input: n = 3, k = 9

Output: “cab”

Explanation: There are 12 different happy string of length 3 [“aba”, “abc”, “aca”, “acb”, “bab”, “bac”, “bca”, “bcb”, “cab”, “cac”, “cba”, “cbc”]. You will find the 9th string = “cab”

Constraints:

  • 1 <= n <= 10
  • 1 <= k <= 100
  • Constructor Details

    • Solution

      public Solution()
  • Method Details

    • getHappyString

      public String getHappyString(int n, int k)