Medium
Implement the myAtoi(string s) function, which converts a string to a 32-bit signed integer (similar to C/C++’s atoi function).
The algorithm for myAtoi(string s) is as follows:
'-' or '+'. Read this character in if it is either. This determines if the final result is negative or positive respectively. Assume the result is positive if neither is present."123" -> 123, "0032" -> 32). If no digits were read, then the integer is 0. Change the sign as necessary (from step 2).[-231, 231 - 1], then clamp the integer so that it remains in the range. Specifically, integers less than -231 should be clamped to -231, and integers greater than 231 - 1 should be clamped to 231 - 1.Note:
' ' is considered a whitespace character.Example 1:
Input: s = “42”
Output: 42
Explanation: The underlined characters are what is read in, the caret is the current reader position.
Step 1: "42" (no characters read because there is no leading whitespace)
         ^ 
Step 2: "42" (no characters read because there is neither a '-' nor '+')
         ^
Step 3: "42" ("42" is read in)
           ^
The parsed integer is 42. Since 42 is in the range [-231, 231 - 1], the final result is 42.
Example 2:
Input: s = “ -42”
Output: -42
Explanation:
Step 1: " -42" (leading whitespace is read and ignored)
          ^ 
Step 2: " -42" ('-' is read, so the result should be negative)
           ^
Step 3: " -42" ("42" is read in)
             ^
The parsed integer is -42.
Since -42 is in the range [-231, 231 - 1], the final result is -42.
Example 3:
Input: s = “4193 with words”
Output: 4193
Explanation:
Step 1: "4193 with words" (no characters read because there is no leading whitespace)
         ^
Step 2: "4193 with words" (no characters read because there is neither a '-' nor '+')
         ^
Step 3: "4193 with words" ("4193" is read in; reading stops because the next character is a non-digit)
             ^ 
The parsed integer is 4193.
Since 4193 is in the range [-231, 231 - 1], the final result is 4193.
Example 4:
Input: s = “words and 987”
Output: 0
Explanation:
Step 1: "words and 987" (no characters read because there is no leading whitespace)
         ^
Step 2: "words and 987" (no characters read because there is neither a '-' nor '+')
         ^
Step 3: "words and 987" (reading stops immediately because there is a non-digit 'w')
         ^
The parsed integer is 0 because no digits were read.
Since 0 is in the range [-231, 231 - 1], the final result is 0.
Example 5:
Input: s = “-91283472332”
Output: -2147483648
Explanation:
Step 1: "-91283472332" (no characters read because there is no leading whitespace)
        ^
Step 2: "-91283472332" ('-' is read, so the result should be negative)
          ^
Step 3: "-91283472332" ("91283472332" is read in)
                     ^
The parsed integer is -91283472332.
Since -91283472332 is less than the lower bound of the range [-231, 231 - 1], the final result is clamped to -231 = -2147483648.
Constraints:
0 <= s.length <= 200s consists of English letters (lower-case and upper-case), digits (0-9), ' ', '+', '-', and '.'.import (
	"math"
	"strings"
)
func myAtoi(A string) int {
	isPositive := checkSign(A)
	validStr := clear(A)
	n := len(validStr)
	if n == 0 {
		return 0
	}
	var result int64
	for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
		result = result*int64(10) + int64(validStr[i]-48)
		if isPositive && result >= math.MaxInt32 {
			return math.MaxInt32
		} else if !isPositive && result >= math.MaxInt32+1 {
			return math.MinInt32
		}
	}
	if !isPositive {
		return int(result) * -1
	}
	return int(result)
}
func checkSign(str string) bool {
	n := len(str)
	for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
		if str[i] == ' ' {
			continue
		} else if str[i] == '-' {
			return false
		} else {
			break
		}
	}
	return true
}
func clear(str string) string {
	var result strings.Builder
	n := len(str)
	signCount := 0
	for i := 0; i < n; i++ {
		if str[i] >= '0' && str[i] <= '9' {
			result.WriteByte(str[i])
		} else if (str[i] == '-' || str[i] == '+') && signCount < 1 && result.Len() == 0 {
			signCount++
			continue
		} else if str[i] == ' ' && result.Len() == 0 && signCount == 0 {
			continue
		} else {
			break
		}
	}
	return result.String()
}