-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 118
/
1012. Complement of Base 10 Integer.cpp
61 lines (44 loc) · 1.76 KB
/
1012. Complement of Base 10 Integer.cpp
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
/**
Every non-negative integer N has a binary representation. For example, 5 can be represented as "101" in binary, 11 as "1011" in binary, and so on. Note that except for N = 0, there are no leading zeroes in any binary representation.
The complement of a binary representation is the number in binary you get when changing every 1 to a 0 and 0 to a 1. For example, the complement of "101" in binary is "010" in binary.
For a given number N in base-10, return the complement of it's binary representation as a base-10 integer.
Example 1:
Input: 5
Output: 2
Explanation: 5 is "101" in binary, with complement "010" in binary, which is 2 in base-10.
Example 2:
Input: 7
Output: 0
Explanation: 7 is "111" in binary, with complement "000" in binary, which is 0 in base-10.
Example 3:
Input: 10
Output: 5
Explanation: 10 is "1010" in binary, with complement "0101" in binary, which is 5 in base-10.
Note:
0 <= N < 10^9
**/
//slow
//Runtime: 8 ms, faster than 10.65% of C++ online submissions for Complement of Base 10 Integer.
//Memory Usage: 8.5 MB, less than 100.00% of C++ online submissions for Complement of Base 10 Integer.
//fast
//Runtime: 4 ms, faster than 100.00% of C++ online submissions for Complement of Base 10 Integer.
//Memory Usage: 8.3 MB, less than 100.00% of C++ online submissions for Complement of Base 10 Integer.
class Solution {
public:
int bitwiseComplement(int N) {
if(N==0) return 1;
vector<int> v;
while(N > 0){
v.push_back(N%2);
N/=2;
}
int ans = 0;
for(int i = v.size()-1; i >=0; i--){
if(v[i]==0){
//ans += pow(2, i); //slow
ans += 1<<i; //fast
}
}
return ans;
}
};