Class Solution

  • All Implemented Interfaces:

    
    public final class Solution
    
                        

    91 - Decode Ways.

    Medium

    A message containing letters from A-Z can be encoded into numbers using the following mapping:

    'A' -> "1" 'B' -> "2" ... 'Z' -> "26"

    To decode an encoded message, all the digits must be grouped then mapped back into letters using the reverse of the mapping above (there may be multiple ways). For example, "11106" can be mapped into:

    • "AAJF" with the grouping (1 1 10 6)

    • "KJF" with the grouping (11 10 6)

    Note that the grouping (1 11 06) is invalid because "06" cannot be mapped into 'F' since "6" is different from "06".

    Given a string s containing only digits, return the number of ways to decode it.

    The test cases are generated so that the answer fits in a 32-bit integer.

    Example 1:

    Input: s = "12"

    Output: 2

    Explanation: "12" could be decoded as "AB" (1 2) or "L" (12).

    Example 2:

    Input: s = "226"

    Output: 3

    Explanation: "226" could be decoded as "BZ" (2 26), "VF" (22 6), or "BBF" (2 2 6).

    Example 3:

    Input: s = "06"

    Output: 0

    Explanation: "06" cannot be mapped to "F" because of the leading zero ("6" is different from "06").

    Constraints:

    • 1 <= s.length <= 100

    • s contains only digits and may contain leading zero(s).

    • Nested Class Summary

      Nested Classes 
      Modifier and Type Class Description
    • Field Summary

      Fields 
      Modifier and Type Field Description
    • Constructor Summary

      Constructors 
      Constructor Description
      Solution()
    • Enum Constant Summary

      Enum Constants 
      Enum Constant Description
    • Method Summary

      Modifier and Type Method Description
      final Integer numDecodings(String s)
      • Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object

        clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait