shortest-distance-to-target-string-in-a-circular-array

shortest-distance-to-target-string-in-a-circular-array


You are given a 0-indexed circular string array words and a string target. A circular array means that the array's end connects to the array's beginning.




  • Formally, the next element of words[i] is words[(i + 1) % n] and the previous element of words[i] is words[(i - 1 + n) % n], where n is the length of words.



Starting from startIndex, you can move to either the next word or the previous word with 1 step at a time.



Return the shortest distance needed to reach the string target. If the string target does not exist in words, return -1.



 


Example 1:



Input: words = ["hello","i","am","leetcode","hello"], target = "hello", startIndex = 1
Output: 1
Explanation: We start from index 1 and can reach "hello" by
- moving 3 units to the right to reach index 4.
- moving 2 units to the left to reach index 4.
- moving 4 units to the right to reach index 0.
- moving 1 unit to the left to reach index 0.
The shortest distance to reach "hello" is 1.


Example 2:



Input: words = ["a","b","leetcode"], target = "leetcode", startIndex = 0
Output: 1
Explanation: We start from index 0 and can reach "leetcode" by
- moving 2 units to the right to reach index 2.
- moving 1 unit to the left to reach index 2.
The shortest distance to reach "leetcode" is 1.


Example 3:



Input: words = ["i","eat","leetcode"], target = "ate", startIndex = 0
Output: -1
Explanation: Since "ate" does not exist in words, we return -1.


 


Constraints:




  • 1 <= words.length <= 100

  • 1 <= words[i].length <= 100

  • words[i] and target consist of only lowercase English letters.

  • 0 <= startIndex < words.length


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