Class Solution

  • All Implemented Interfaces:

    
    public final class Solution
    
                        

    721 - Accounts Merge\.

    Medium

    Given a list of accounts where each element accounts[i] is a list of strings, where the first element accounts[i][0] is a name, and the rest of the elements are emails representing emails of the account.

    Now, we would like to merge these accounts. Two accounts definitely belong to the same person if there is some common email to both accounts. Note that even if two accounts have the same name, they may belong to different people as people could have the same name. A person can have any number of accounts initially, but all of their accounts definitely have the same name.

    After merging the accounts, return the accounts in the following format: the first element of each account is the name, and the rest of the elements are emails in sorted order. The accounts themselves can be returned in any order.

    Example 1:

    Input: accounts =

    [
        ["John","johnsmith@mail.com","john\_newyork@mail.com"],
        ["John","johnsmith@mail.com","john00@mail.com"],
        ["Mary","mary@mail.com"],
        ["John","johnnybravo@mail.com"]
    ]

    Output:

    [
        ["John","john00@mail.com","john\_newyork@mail.com","johnsmith@mail.com"],
        ["Mary","mary@mail.com"],
        ["John","johnnybravo@mail.com"]
    ]

    Explanation: The first and second John's are the same person as they have the common email "johnsmith@mail.com". The third John and Mary are different people as none of their email addresses are used by other accounts. We could return these lists in any order, for example the answer ['Mary', 'mary@mail.com', 'John', 'johnnybravo@mail.com', 'John', 'john00@mail.com', 'john\_newyork@mail.com', 'johnsmith@mail.com'] would still be accepted.

    Example 2:

    Input: accounts =

    [
        ["Gabe","Gabe0@m.co","Gabe3@m.co","Gabe1@m.co"],
        ["Kevin","Kevin3@m.co","Kevin5@m.co","Kevin0@m.co"],
        ["Ethan","Ethan5@m.co","Ethan4@m.co","Ethan0@m.co"],
        ["Hanzo","Hanzo3@m.co","Hanzo1@m.co","Hanzo0@m.co"],
        ["Fern","Fern5@m.co","Fern1@m.co","Fern0@m.co"]
    ]

    Output:

    [
        ["Ethan","Ethan0@m.co","Ethan4@m.co","Ethan5@m.co"],
        ["Gabe","Gabe0@m.co","Gabe1@m.co","Gabe3@m.co"],
        ["Hanzo","Hanzo0@m.co","Hanzo1@m.co","Hanzo3@m.co"],
        ["Kevin","Kevin0@m.co","Kevin3@m.co","Kevin5@m.co"],
        ["Fern","Fern0@m.co","Fern1@m.co","Fern5@m.co"]
    ]

    Constraints:

    • 1 <= accounts.length <= 1000

    • 2 <= accounts[i].length <= 10

    • 1 <= accounts[i][j] <= 30

    • accounts[i][0] consists of English letters.

    • accounts[i][j] (for j > 0) is a valid email.

    • Nested Class Summary

      Nested Classes 
      Modifier and Type Class Description
      public final class Solution.UnionFind
    • 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 List<List<String>> accountsMerge(List<List<String>> accounts)
      • Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object

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