You are given a positive integer k
. You are also given:
rowConditions
of size n
where rowConditions[i] = [abovei, belowi]
, andcolConditions
of size m
where colConditions[i] = [lefti, righti]
.The two arrays contain integers from 1
to k
.
You have to build a k x k
matrix that contains each of the numbers from 1
to k
exactly once. The remaining cells should have the value 0
.
The matrix should also satisfy the following conditions:
abovei
should appear in a row that is strictly above the row at which the number belowi
appears for all i
from 0
to n - 1
.lefti
should appear in a column that is strictly left of the column at which the number righti
appears for all i
from 0
to m - 1
.Return any matrix that satisfies the conditions. If no answer exists, return an empty matrix.
Example 1:
Input: k = 3, rowConditions = [[1,2],[3,2]], colConditions = [[2,1],[3,2]] Output: [[3,0,0],[0,0,1],[0,2,0]] Explanation: The diagram above shows a valid example of a matrix that satisfies all the conditions. The row conditions are the following: - Number 1 is in row 1, and number 2 is in row 2, so 1 is above 2 in the matrix. - Number 3 is in row 0, and number 2 is in row 2, so 3 is above 2 in the matrix. The column conditions are the following: - Number 2 is in column 1, and number 1 is in column 2, so 2 is left of 1 in the matrix. - Number 3 is in column 0, and number 2 is in column 1, so 3 is left of 2 in the matrix. Note that there may be multiple correct answers.
Example 2:
Input: k = 3, rowConditions = [[1,2],[2,3],[3,1],[2,3]], colConditions = [[2,1]] Output: [] Explanation: From the first two conditions, 3 has to be below 1 but the third conditions needs 3 to be above 1 to be satisfied. No matrix can satisfy all the conditions, so we return the empty matrix.
Constraints:
2 <= k <= 400
1 <= rowConditions.length, colConditions.length <= 104
rowConditions[i].length == colConditions[i].length == 2
1 <= abovei, belowi, lefti, righti <= k
abovei != belowi
lefti != righti