831. Masking Personal Information

Description

You are given a personal information string s, representing either an email address or a phone number. Return the masked personal information using the below rules.

Email address:

An email address is:

  • A name consisting of uppercase and lowercase English letters, followed by
  • The '@' symbol, followed by
  • The domain consisting of uppercase and lowercase English letters with a dot '.' somewhere in the middle (not the first or last character).

To mask an email:

  • The uppercase letters in the name and domain must be converted to lowercase letters.
  • The middle letters of the name (i.e., all but the first and last letters) must be replaced by 5 asterisks "*****".

Phone number:

A phone number is formatted as follows:

  • The phone number contains 10-13 digits.
  • The last 10 digits make up the local number.
  • The remaining 0-3 digits, in the beginning, make up the country code.
  • Separation characters from the set {'+', '-', '(', ')', ' '} separate the above digits in some way.

To mask a phone number:

  • Remove all separation characters.
  • The masked phone number should have the form:
    • "***-***-XXXX" if the country code has 0 digits.
    • "+*-***-***-XXXX" if the country code has 1 digit.
    • "+**-***-***-XXXX" if the country code has 2 digits.
    • "+***-***-***-XXXX" if the country code has 3 digits.
  • "XXXX" is the last 4 digits of the local number.

 

Example 1:

Input: s = "LeetCode@LeetCode.com"
Output: "l*****e@leetcode.com"
Explanation: s is an email address.
The name and domain are converted to lowercase, and the middle of the name is replaced by 5 asterisks.

Example 2:

Input: s = "AB@qq.com"
Output: "a*****b@qq.com"
Explanation: s is an email address.
The name and domain are converted to lowercase, and the middle of the name is replaced by 5 asterisks.
Note that even though "ab" is 2 characters, it still must have 5 asterisks in the middle.

Example 3:

Input: s = "1(234)567-890"
Output: "***-***-7890"
Explanation: s is a phone number.
There are 10 digits, so the local number is 10 digits and the country code is 0 digits.
Thus, the resulting masked number is "***-***-7890".

 

Constraints:

  • s is either a valid email or a phone number.
  • If s is an email:
    • 8 <= s.length <= 40
    • s consists of uppercase and lowercase English letters and exactly one '@' symbol and '.' symbol.
  • If s is a phone number:
    • 10 <= s.length <= 20
    • s consists of digits, spaces, and the symbols '(', ')', '-', and '+'.

Solutions

Solution 1

Python Code
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class Solution:
    def maskPII(self, s: str) -> str:
        if s[0].isalpha():
            s = s.lower()
            return s[0] + '*****' + s[s.find('@') - 1 :]
        s = ''.join(c for c in s if c.isdigit())
        cnt = len(s) - 10
        suf = '***-***-' + s[-4:]
        return suf if cnt == 0 else f'+{"*" * cnt}-{suf}'

Java Code
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class Solution {
    public String maskPII(String s) {
        if (Character.isLetter(s.charAt(0))) {
            s = s.toLowerCase();
            int i = s.indexOf('@');
            return s.substring(0, 1) + "*****" + s.substring(i - 1);
        }
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        for (char c : s.toCharArray()) {
            if (Character.isDigit(c)) {
                sb.append(c);
            }
        }
        s = sb.toString();
        int cnt = s.length() - 10;
        String suf = "***-***-" + s.substring(s.length() - 4);
        return cnt == 0 ? suf
                        : "+"
                + "*".repeat(cnt) + "-" + suf;
    }
}

C++ Code
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class Solution {
public:
    string maskPII(string s) {
        int i = s.find('@');
        if (i != -1) {
            string ans;
            ans += tolower(s[0]);
            ans += "*****";
            for (int j = i - 1; j < s.size(); ++j) {
                ans += tolower(s[j]);
            }
            return ans;
        }
        string t;
        for (char c : s) {
            if (isdigit(c)) {
                t += c;
            }
        }
        int cnt = t.size() - 10;
        string suf = "***-***-" + t.substr(t.size() - 4);
        return cnt == 0 ? suf : "+" + string(cnt, '*') + "-" + suf;
    }
};

Go Code
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func maskPII(s string) string {
	i := strings.Index(s, "@")
	if i != -1 {
		s = strings.ToLower(s)
		return s[0:1] + "*****" + s[i-1:]
	}
	t := []rune{}
	for _, c := range s {
		if c >= '0' && c <= '9' {
			t = append(t, c)
		}
	}
	s = string(t)
	cnt := len(s) - 10
	suf := "***-***-" + s[len(s)-4:]
	if cnt == 0 {
		return suf
	}
	return "+" + strings.Repeat("*", cnt) + "-" + suf
}

TypeScript Code
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function maskPII(s: string): string {
    const i = s.indexOf('@');
    if (i !== -1) {
        let ans = s[0].toLowerCase() + '*****';
        for (let j = i - 1; j < s.length; ++j) {
            ans += s.charAt(j).toLowerCase();
        }
        return ans;
    }
    let t = '';
    for (const c of s) {
        if (/\d/.test(c)) {
            t += c;
        }
    }
    const cnt = t.length - 10;
    const suf = `***-***-${t.substring(t.length - 4)}`;
    return cnt === 0 ? suf : `+${'*'.repeat(cnt)}-${suf}`;
}