There are many numbers in an array and each number appears three times excepting for one special number appearing once. Here is the question: how can I find the special numb
If the array is sorted, the problem is trivial, you just loop through the list, three items at a time, and check if the third item is the same as the current.
If the array is not sorted, you can use a Hash Table to count the number of occurences of each numbers.
int main()
{
int B[] = {1,1,1,3,3,3,20,4,4,4};
int ones = 0 ;
int twos = 0 ;
int not_threes;
int x ;
for( i=0; i< 10; i++ )
{
x = B[i];
twos |= ones & x ;
ones ^= x ;
not_threes = ~(ones & twos) ;
ones &= not_threes ;
twos &= not_threes ;
}
printf("\n unique element = %d \n", ones );
return 0;
}
The code works in similar line with the question of "finding the element which appears once in an array - containing other elements each appearing twice". Solution is to XOR all the elements and you get the answer.
Basically, it makes use of the fact that x^x = 0. So all paired elements get XOR'd and vanish leaving the lonely element.
Since XOR operation is associative, commutative.. it does not matter in what fashion elements appear in array, we still get the answer.
Now, in the current question - if we apply the above idea, it will not work because - we got to have every unique element appearing even number of times. So instead of getting the answer, we will end up getting XOR of all unique elements which is not what we want.
To rectify this mistake, the code makes use of 2 variables.
ones - At any point of time, this variable holds XOR of all the elements which have
appeared "only" once.
twos - At any point of time, this variable holds XOR of all the elements which have
appeared "only" twice.
So if at any point time,
1. A new number appears - It gets XOR'd to the variable "ones".
2. A number gets repeated(appears twice) - It is removed from "ones" and XOR'd to the
variable "twice".
3. A number appears for the third time - It gets removed from both "ones" and "twice".
The final answer we want is the value present in "ones" - coz, it holds the unique element.
So if we explain how steps 1 to 3 happens in the code, we are done.
Before explaining above 3 steps, lets look at last three lines of the code,
not_threes = ~(ones & twos)
ones & = not_threes
twos & = not_threes
All it does is, common 1's between "ones" and "twos" are converted to zero.
For simplicity, in all the below explanations - consider we have got only 4 elements in the array (one unique element and 3 repeated elements - in any order).
Explanation for step 1
------------------------
Lets say a new element(x) appears.
CURRENT SITUATION - Both variables - "ones" and "twos" has not recorded "x".
Observe the statement "twos| = ones & x".
Since bit representation of "x" is not present in "ones", AND condition yields nothing. So "twos" does not get bit representation of "x".
But, in next step "ones ^= x" - "ones" ends up adding bits of "x". Thus new element gets recorded in "ones" but not in "twos".
The last 3 lines of code as explained already, converts common 1's b/w "ones" and "twos" to zeros.
Since as of now, only "ones" has "x" and not "twos" - last 3 lines does nothing.
Explanation for step 2.
------------------------
Lets say an element(x) appears twice.
CURRENT SITUATION - "ones" has recorded "x" but not "twos".
Now due to the statement, "twos| = ones & x" - "twos" ends up getting bits of x.
But due to the statement, "ones ^ = x" - "ones" removes "x" from its binary representation.
Again, last 3 lines of code does nothing.
So ultimately, "twos" ends up getting bits of "x" and "ones" ends up losing bits of "x".
Explanation for step 3.
-------------------------
Lets say an element(x) appears for the third time.
CURRENT SITUATION - "ones" does not have bit representation of "x" but "twos" has.
Though "ones & x" does not yield nothing .. "twos" by itself has bit representation of "x". So after this statement, "two" has bit representation of "x".
Due to "ones^=x", after this step, "one" also ends up getting bit representation of "x".
Now last 3 lines of code removes common 1's of "ones" and "twos" - which is the bit representation of "x".
Thus both "ones" and "twos" ends up losing bit representation of "x".
1st example
------------
2, 2, 2, 4
After first iteration,
ones = 2, twos = 0
After second iteration,
ones = 0, twos = 2
After third iteration,
ones = 0, twos = 0
After fourth iteration,
ones = 4, twos = 0
2nd example
------------
4, 2, 2, 2
After first iteration,
ones = 4, twos = 0
After second iteration,
ones = 6, twos = 0
After third iteration,
ones = 4, twos = 2
After fourth iteration,
ones = 4, twos = 0
Explanation becomes much more complicated when there are more elements in the array in mixed up fashion. But again due to associativity of XOR operation - We actually end up getting answer.
Add the numbers bitwise mod 3, e.g.
def special(lst):
ones = 0
twos = 0
for x in lst:
twos |= ones & x
ones ^= x
not_threes = ~(ones & twos)
ones &= not_threes
twos &= not_threes
return ones
I didnt find the implementation of bitwise mod 3 very intuitive so I wrote a more intiuitive version of the code and tested it with various examples and it worked. Here is the code inside the loop
threes=twos&x //=find all bits counting exactly thrice
x&=~threes //remove the bits countring thrice from x as well as twos
twos&=~threes
twos|=ones&x //find all bits counting exactly twice
x&=~twos //remove all bits counting twice from modified x as well as ones
ones&=~twos
ones|=x //find all the bits from previous ones and modified x
Hope you guys find it easy to understand this version of code.
How about the following?
If we assume that you know the maximum and minimum values of all numbers in the array (or can at least limit them to some maximum range, say max - min + 1, then create an auxiliary array of that size, initialized to all zeros, say AuxArray[].
Now scan your original array, say MyArray[], and for each element MyArray[i], increment AuxArray[MyArray[i]] by one. After your scan is complete, there will be exactly one element in AuxArray[] that equals one, and the index of that element in AuxArray[] will be the value of the special number.
No complicated search here. Just a linear order of complexity.
Hope I've made sense.
John Doner
I got a solution. It's O (n) time and O (1) space.
n=list(map(int,input().split()))
l=[0]*64
for x in n:
b=bin(x)[2:]
b='0'*(64-len(b))+b
i=0
while i<len(l):
l[i]+=int(b[i])
i+=1
i=0
while i<len(l):
l[i]%=3
i+=1
s=''
for x in l:
s+=str(x)
print(int(s,2))