Medium
Given an encoded string, return its decoded string.
The encoding rule is: k[encoded_string]
, where the encoded_string
inside the square brackets is being repeated exactly k
times. Note that k
is guaranteed to be a positive integer.
You may assume that the input string is always valid; there are no extra white spaces, square brackets are well-formed, etc. Furthermore, you may assume that the original data does not contain any digits and that digits are only for those repeat numbers, k
. For example, there will not be input like 3a
or 2[4]
.
The test cases are generated so that the length of the output will never exceed 105
.
Example 1:
Input: s = “3[a]2[bc]”
Output: “aaabcbc”
Example 2:
Input: s = “3[a2[c]]”
Output: “accaccacc”
Example 3:
Input: s = “2[abc]3[cd]ef”
Output: “abcabccdcdcdef”
Constraints:
1 <= s.length <= 30
s
consists of lowercase English letters, digits, and square brackets '[]'
.s
is guaranteed to be a valid input.s
are in the range [1, 300]
.impl Solution {
pub fn decode_string(s: String) -> String {
s
.chars()
.fold((String::new(), String::new(), Vec::new()), |(mut next_string, mut next_integer, mut stack): (String, String, Vec<(usize, String)>), c| {
match c {
'0'..='9' => {
next_integer.push(c);
(next_string, next_integer, stack)
},
'[' => {
stack.push((next_integer.parse::<usize>().unwrap(), next_string));
next_integer.clear();
(String::new(), next_integer, stack)
},
']' => {
let (last_integer, left_string) = stack.pop().unwrap();
let next_string = left_string + &next_string.repeat(last_integer);
(next_string, next_integer, stack)
},
c => {
next_string.push(c);
(next_string, next_integer, stack)
}
}
}).0
}
}