Class Solution
java.lang.Object
g2601_2700.s2617_minimum_number_of_visited_cells_in_a_grid.Solution
2617 - Minimum Number of Visited Cells in a Grid.
Hard
You are given a 0-indexed m x n integer matrix grid. Your initial position is at the top-left cell (0, 0).
Starting from the cell (i, j), you can move to one of the following cells:
- Cells
(i, k)withj < k <= grid[i][j] + j(rightward movement), or - Cells
(k, j)withi < k <= grid[i][j] + i(downward movement).
Return the minimum number of cells you need to visit to reach the bottom-right cell (m - 1, n - 1). If there is no valid path, return -1.
Example 1:

Input: grid = [[3,4,2,1],[4,2,3,1],[2,1,0,0],[2,4,0,0]]
Output: 4
Explanation: The image above shows one of the paths that visits exactly 4 cells.
Example 2:

Input: grid = [[3,4,2,1],[4,2,1,1],[2,1,1,0],[3,4,1,0]]
Output: 3
Explanation: The image above shows one of the paths that visits exactly 3 cells.
Example 3:

Input: grid = [[2,1,0],[1,0,0]]
Output: -1
Explanation: It can be proven that no path exists.
Constraints:
m == grid.lengthn == grid[i].length1 <= m, n <= 1051 <= m * n <= 1050 <= grid[i][j] < m * ngrid[m - 1][n - 1] == 0
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Solution
public Solution()
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minimumVisitedCells
public int minimumVisitedCells(int[][] grid)
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