1905. Count Sub Islands
Difficulty: Medium
Topics: Array, Depth-First Search, Breadth-First Search, Union Find, Matrix
You are given two m x n binary matrices grid1 and grid2 containing only 0's (representing water) and 1's (representing land). An island is a group of 1's connected 4-directionally (horizontal or vertical). Any cells outside of the grid are considered water cells.
An island in grid2 is considered a sub-island if there is an island in grid1 that contains all the cells that make up this island in grid2.
Return the number of islands in grid2 that are considered sub-islands.
Example 1:
- Input: grid1 = [[1,1,1,0,0],[0,1,1,1,1],[0,0,0,0,0],[1,0,0,0,0],[1,1,0,1,1]], grid2 = [[1,1,1,0,0],[0,0,1,1,1],[0,1,0,0,0],[1,0,1,1,0],[0,1,0,1,0]]
- Output: 3
-
Explanation:
- In the picture above, the grid on the left is grid1 and the grid on the right is grid2.
- The 1s colored red in grid2 are those considered to be part of a sub-island. There are three sub-islands.
Example 2:
- Input: grid1 = [[1,0,1,0,1],[1,1,1,1,1],[0,0,0,0,0],[1,1,1,1,1],[1,0,1,0,1]], grid2 = [[0,0,0,0,0],[1,1,1,1,1],[0,1,0,1,0],[0,1,0,1,0],[1,0,0,0,1]]
- Output: 2
-
Explanation:
- In the picture above, the grid on the left is grid1 and the grid on the right is grid2.
- The 1s colored red in grid2 are those considered to be part of a sub-island. There are two sub-islands.
Constraints:
m == grid1.length == grid2.lengthn == grid1[i].length == grid2[i].length1 <= m, n <= 500-
grid1[i][j]andgrid2[i][j]are either0or1.
Hint:
- Let's use floodfill to iterate over the islands of the second grid
- Let's note that if all the cells in an island in the second grid if they are represented by land in the first grid then they are connected hence making that island a sub-island
Solution:
We'll use the Depth-First Search (DFS) approach to explore the islands in grid2 and check if each island is entirely contained within a corresponding island in grid1. Here's how we can implement the solution:
Steps:
-
Traverse the Grid: We'll iterate through each cell in
grid2. -
Identify Islands in
grid2: When we encounter a land cell (1) ingrid2, we'll use DFS to explore the entire island. -
Check Sub-Island Condition: While performing DFS on an island in
grid2, we'll check if all the corresponding cells ingrid1are also land cells. If they are, the island is a sub-island. -
Count Sub-Islands: For each island in
grid2that meets the sub-island condition, we'll increment our sub-island count.
Let's implement this solution in PHP: 1905. Count Sub Islands
<?php
/**
* @param $grid1
* @param $grid2
* @return int
*/
function countSubIslands($grid1, $grid2) {
...
...
...
/**
* go to ./solution.php
*/
}
/**
* @param $grid1
* @param $grid2
* @param $i
* @param $j
* @param $m
* @param $n
* @return int|true
*/
function dfs(&$grid1, &$grid2, $i, $j, $m, $n) {
...
...
...
/**
* go to ./solution.php
*/
}
// Example usage:
// Example 1
$grid1 = [
[1,1,1,0,0],
[0,1,1,1,1],
[0,0,0,0,0],
[1,0,0,0,0],
[1,1,0,1,1]
];
$grid2 = [
[1,1,1,0,0],
[0,0,1,1,1],
[0,1,0,0,0],
[1,0,1,1,0],
[0,1,0,1,0]
];
echo countSubIslands($grid1, $grid2); // Output: 3
// Example 2
$grid1 = [
[1,0,1,0,1],
[1,1,1,1,1],
[0,0,0,0,0],
[1,1,1,1,1],
[1,0,1,0,1]
];
$grid2 = [
[0,0,0,0,0],
[1,1,1,1,1],
[0,1,0,1,0],
[0,1,0,1,0],
[1,0,0,0,1]
];
echo countSubIslands($grid1, $grid2); // Output: 2
?>
Explanation:
-
DFS Function: The
dfsfunction explores the island ingrid2and checks if the corresponding cells ingrid1are all land cells. If any cell ingrid2is land but the corresponding cell ingrid1is water, the island ingrid2is not a sub-island. -
Mark Visited: As we traverse
grid2, we mark cells as visited by setting them to0. -
Main Loop: We iterate through all cells in
grid2. Whenever we find a land cell that hasn't been visited, we initiate a DFS to check if it's part of a sub-island.
Time Complexity:
The time complexity is (O(m \times n)) where m is the number of rows and n is the number of columns. This is because we potentially visit every cell once.
This solution should work efficiently within the given constraints.
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