Binary Watch¶
Time: O(1); Space: O(1); easy
A binary watch has 4 LEDs on the top which represent the hours (0-11), and the 6 LEDs on the bottom represent the minutes (0-59).
Each LED represents a zero or one, with the least significant bit on the right. For example, the above binary watch reads “3:25”.
Given a non-negative integer n which represents the number of LEDs that are currently on, return all possible times the watch could represent.
Example:
Input: n = 1
Output: [“1:00”, “2:00”, “4:00”, “8:00”, “0:01”, “0:02”, “0:04”, “0:08”, “0:16”, “0:32”]
Notes:
The order of output does not matter.
The hour must not contain a leading zero, for example “01:00” is not valid, it should be “1:00”.
[1]:
class Solution1(object):
def readBinaryWatch(self, num) -> list:
"""
:type num: int
:rtype: List[str]
"""
def bit_count(bits):
count = 0
while bits:
bits &= bits-1
count += 1
return count
return ['%d:%02d' % (h, m)
for h in range(12)
for m in range(60)
if bit_count(h) + bit_count(m) == num]
[2]:
s = Solution1()
assert s.readBinaryWatch(1) == ['0:01', '0:02', '0:04', '0:08', '0:16', '0:32', '1:00', '2:00', '4:00', '8:00']
[4]:
class Solution2(object):
def readBinaryWatch(self, num) -> list:
"""
:type num: int
:rtype: List[str]
"""
return ['{0}:{1}'.format(str(h), str(m).zfill(2))
for h in range(12)
for m in range(60)
if (bin(h) + bin(m)).count('1') == num]
[5]:
s = Solution2()
assert s.readBinaryWatch(1) == ['0:01', '0:02', '0:04', '0:08', '0:16', '0:32', '1:00', '2:00', '4:00', '8:00']