find-elements-in-a-contaminated-binary-tree

find-elements-in-a-contaminated-binary-tree


Given a binary tree with the following rules:




  1. root.val == 0

  2. For any treeNode:

    1. If treeNode.val has a value x and treeNode.left != null, then treeNode.left.val == 2 * x + 1

    2. If treeNode.val has a value x and treeNode.right != null, then treeNode.right.val == 2 * x + 2





Now the binary tree is contaminated, which means all treeNode.val have been changed to -1.



Implement the FindElements class:




  • FindElements(TreeNode* root) Initializes the object with a contaminated binary tree and recovers it.

  • bool find(int target) Returns true if the target value exists in the recovered binary tree.



 


Example 1:



Input
["FindElements","find","find"]
[[[-1,null,-1]],[1],[2]]
Output
[null,false,true]
Explanation
FindElements findElements = new FindElements([-1,null,-1]); 
findElements.find(1); // return False 
findElements.find(2); // return True 


Example 2:



Input
["FindElements","find","find","find"]
[[[-1,-1,-1,-1,-1]],[1],[3],[5]]
Output
[null,true,true,false]
Explanation
FindElements findElements = new FindElements([-1,-1,-1,-1,-1]);
findElements.find(1); // return True
findElements.find(3); // return True
findElements.find(5); // return False


Example 3:



Input
["FindElements","find","find","find","find"]
[[[-1,null,-1,-1,null,-1]],[2],[3],[4],[5]]
Output
[null,true,false,false,true]
Explanation
FindElements findElements = new FindElements([-1,null,-1,-1,null,-1]);
findElements.find(2); // return True
findElements.find(3); // return False
findElements.find(4); // return False
findElements.find(5); // return True


 


Constraints:




  • TreeNode.val == -1

  • The height of the binary tree is less than or equal to 20

  • The total number of nodes is between [1, 104]

  • Total calls of find() is between [1, 104]

  • 0 <= target <= 106


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