This post is part of the Algorithms Problem Solving series.
Problem description
This is the Shuffle the array problem. The description looks like this:
Given the array nums
consisting of 2n
elements in the form [x1,x2,...,xn,y1,y2,...,yn]
.
Return the array in the form [x1,y1,x2,y2,...,xn,yn]
.
Examples
Input: nums = [2,5,1,3,4,7], n = 3
Output: [2,3,5,4,1,7]
Input: nums = [1,2,3,4,4,3,2,1], n = 4
Output: [1,4,2,3,3,2,4,1]
Input: nums = [1,1,2,2], n = 2
Output: [1,2,1,2]
Solution
The idea of my solution was to get the first and the last half of the nums
list. Then iterate through the lists and append one by one.
def shuffle(nums, n):
first_half = nums[:n]
last_half = nums[n:]
final_list = []
for index in range(len(first_half)):
final_list.append(first_half[index])
final_list.append(last_half[index])
return final_list
We could also iterate through the lists simultaneously by using the zip
function. And append the items in one call, instead of two lines:
def shuffle(nums, n):
first_half = nums[:n]
last_half = nums[n:]
final_list = []
for first, last in zip(first_half, last_half):
final_list.extend((first, last))
return final_list
Top comments (1)
Not sure if this is idiomatic Python but we can do it in O(n) space and O(log(n)) time ... I think ... :-)