You are given a string s
that contains digits 0-9
, addition symbols '+'
, and multiplication symbols '*'
only, representing a valid math expression of single digit numbers (e.g., 3+5*2
). This expression was given to n
elementary school students. The students were instructed to get the answer of the expression by following this order of operations:
You are given an integer array answers
of length n
, which are the submitted answers of the students in no particular order. You are asked to grade the answers
, by following these rules:
5
points;2
points;0
points.Return the sum of the points of the students.
Example 1:
Input: s = "7+3*1*2", answers = [20,13,42] Output: 7 Explanation: As illustrated above, the correct answer of the expression is 13, therefore one student is rewarded 5 points: [20,13,42] A student might have applied the operators in this wrong order: ((7+3)*1)*2 = 20. Therefore one student is rewarded 2 points: [20,13,42] The points for the students are: [2,5,0]. The sum of the points is 2+5+0=7.
Example 2:
Input: s = "3+5*2", answers = [13,0,10,13,13,16,16] Output: 19 Explanation: The correct answer of the expression is 13, therefore three students are rewarded 5 points each: [13,0,10,13,13,16,16] A student might have applied the operators in this wrong order: ((3+5)*2 = 16. Therefore two students are rewarded 2 points: [13,0,10,13,13,16,16] The points for the students are: [5,0,0,5,5,2,2]. The sum of the points is 5+0+0+5+5+2+2=19.
Example 3:
Input: s = "6+0*1", answers = [12,9,6,4,8,6] Output: 10 Explanation: The correct answer of the expression is 6. If a student had incorrectly done (6+0)*1, the answer would also be 6. By the rules of grading, the students will still be rewarded 5 points (as they got the correct answer), not 2 points. The points for the students are: [0,0,5,0,0,5]. The sum of the points is 10.
Constraints:
3 <= s.length <= 31
s
represents a valid expression that contains only digits 0-9
, '+'
, and '*'
only.[0, 9]
.1 <=
The count of all operators ('+'
and '*'
) in the math expression <= 15
[0, 1000]
.n == answers.length
1 <= n <= 104
0 <= answers[i] <= 1000