2200. Find All K-Distant Indices in an Array
You are given a 0-indexed integer array
numsand two integerskeyandk. A k-distant index is an indexiofnumsfor which there exists at least one indexjsuch that|i - j| <= kandnums[j] == key.Return a list of all k-distant indices sorted in increasing order.
Example 1:
Input: nums = [3,4,9,1,3,9,5], key = 9, k = 1
Output: [1,2,3,4,5,6]
Explanation: Here,nums[2] == keyandnums[5] == key. - For index 0, |0 - 2| > k and |0 - 5| > k, so there is no jwhere|0 - j| <= kandnums[j] == key. Thus, 0 is not a k-distant index. - For index 1, |1 - 2| <= k and nums[2] == key, so 1 is a k-distant index. - For index 2, |2 - 2| <= k and nums[2] == key, so 2 is a k-distant index. - For index 3, |3 - 2| <= k and nums[2] == key, so 3 is a k-distant index. - For index 4, |4 - 5| <= k and nums[5] == key, so 4 is a k-distant index. - For index 5, |5 - 5| <= k and nums[5] == key, so 5 is a k-distant index. - For index 6, |6 - 5| <= k and nums[5] == key, so 6 is a k-distant index.
Thus, we return [1,2,3,4,5,6] which is sorted in increasing order.Example 2:
Input: nums = [2,2,2,2,2], key = 2, k = 2
Output: [0,1,2,3,4]
Explanation: For all indices i in nums, there exists some index j such that |i - j| <= k and nums[j] == key, so every index is a k-distant index.
Hence, we return [0,1,2,3,4].
def findKDistantIndices(self, nums: List[int], key: int, k: int) -> List[int]:
res = []
r = 0
n = len(nums)
for j in range(n):
if nums[j] == key:
l = max(r, j - k)
r = min(n - 1, j + k) + 1
for i in range(l, r):
res.append(i)
return res