Given some assortment of brackets, you must find the largest substring that is a valid matching bracket pattern
- A bracket match is an opening and closing version of the same kind of bracket beside each other ()
- If a bracket matches then outer brackets can also match (())
- The valid brackets are ()[]{}
For example for the input {([])()[(])}()]
the answer would be ([])()
as that is the largest substring that has all matches
You must accept the input as a command line argument (entered when your app is ran) and print out the result
(It will be called like node main.js [(]()
or however else to run apps in your language)
You can use the solution tester in this post to test you followed the correct format https://programming.dev/post/1805174
Any programming language may be used. 3 points will be given if you pass all the test cases with 1 bonus point going to whoevers performs the quickest and 1 for whoever can get the least amount of characters
To submit put the code and the language you used below
People who completed the challenge:
- @SleveMcDichael@programming.dev -
6.64s
-1203 chars
(rust) - @shape-warrior-t@kbin.social -
0.148s
-1251 chars
(python) - @nieceandtows@programming.dev -
0.008s
-1268 chars
(python) - @brie@beehaw.org -
0.001s
-1516 chars
(c) (fastest) - @Quasari@programming.dev
0.031s
-317 chars
(javascript) (shortest)
submissions open for another day (since the last time I edited the post)
Please feel free to suggest changes to make the code more efficient.
EDIT: for some reason, < is not showing up properly inside a code block. Kindly replace it with the right symbol when you test.
Python:
import sys input_string = sys.argv[1] matches = { "}": "{", "]": "[", ")": "(" } bracket_matches_strict = [] def get_matching_substring_strict(string): substring = '' index_start = -1 index_end = -1 bracket_counts = { "{": 0, "[": 0, "(": 0 } for index, letter in enumerate(string): if letter in matches.values(): if index_start == -1: index_start = index substring += letter bracket_counts[letter] += 1 if letter in matches.keys(): if not substring: break if substring[-1] == matches[letter]: substring = substring[:-1] bracket_counts[matches[letter]] -= 1 if not [cnt for cnt in bracket_counts.values() if cnt]: index_end = index if [cnt for cnt in bracket_counts.values() if cnt < 0]: break else: break if index_start != -1 and index_end != -1: matching_substring = string[index_start:index_end + 1] return len(matching_substring), matching_substring for i in range(len(input_string)): bracket_substring_strict = get_matching_substring_strict(input_string[i:]) if bracket_substring_strict: bracket_matches_strict.append(bracket_substring_strict) print(sorted(bracket_matches_strict)[-1][1])
I think I could have shaved 50 letters if I named the function and variables differently, 😄