734. Sentence Similarity

Description

We can represent a sentence as an array of words, for example, the sentence "I am happy with leetcode" can be represented as arr = ["I","am",happy","with","leetcode"].

Given two sentences sentence1 and sentence2 each represented as a string array and given an array of string pairs similarPairs where similarPairs[i] = [xi, yi] indicates that the two words xi and yi are similar.

Return true if sentence1 and sentence2 are similar, or false if they are not similar.

Two sentences are similar if:

  • They have the same length (i.e., the same number of words)
  • sentence1[i] and sentence2[i] are similar.

Notice that a word is always similar to itself, also notice that the similarity relation is not transitive. For example, if the words a and b are similar, and the words b and c are similar, a and c are not necessarily similar.

 

Example 1:

Input: sentence1 = ["great","acting","skills"], sentence2 = ["fine","drama","talent"], similarPairs = [["great","fine"],["drama","acting"],["skills","talent"]]
Output: true
Explanation: The two sentences have the same length and each word i of sentence1 is also similar to the corresponding word in sentence2.

Example 2:

Input: sentence1 = ["great"], sentence2 = ["great"], similarPairs = []
Output: true
Explanation: A word is similar to itself.

Example 3:

Input: sentence1 = ["great"], sentence2 = ["doubleplus","good"], similarPairs = [["great","doubleplus"]]
Output: false
Explanation: As they don't have the same length, we return false.

 

Constraints:

  • 1 <= sentence1.length, sentence2.length <= 1000
  • 1 <= sentence1[i].length, sentence2[i].length <= 20
  • sentence1[i] and sentence2[i] consist of English letters.
  • 0 <= similarPairs.length <= 1000
  • similarPairs[i].length == 2
  • 1 <= xi.length, yi.length <= 20
  • xi and yi consist of lower-case and upper-case English letters.
  • All the pairs (xi, yi) are distinct.

Solutions

Solution 1

Python Code
 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
class Solution:
    def areSentencesSimilar(
        self, sentence1: List[str], sentence2: List[str], similarPairs: List[List[str]]
    ) -> bool:
        if len(sentence1) != len(sentence2):
            return False
        s = {(a, b) for a, b in similarPairs}
        return all(
            a == b or (a, b) in s or (b, a) in s for a, b in zip(sentence1, sentence2)
        )

Java Code
 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
class Solution {
    public boolean areSentencesSimilar(
        String[] sentence1, String[] sentence2, List<List<String>> similarPairs) {
        if (sentence1.length != sentence2.length) {
            return false;
        }
        Set<String> s = new HashSet<>();
        for (List<String> e : similarPairs) {
            s.add(e.get(0) + "." + e.get(1));
        }
        for (int i = 0; i < sentence1.length; ++i) {
            String a = sentence1[i], b = sentence2[i];
            if (!a.equals(b) && !s.contains(a + "." + b) && !s.contains(b + "." + a)) {
                return false;
            }
        }
        return true;
    }
}

C++ Code
 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
11
12
13
14
class Solution {
public:
    bool areSentencesSimilar(vector<string>& sentence1, vector<string>& sentence2, vector<vector<string>>& similarPairs) {
        int m = sentence1.size(), n = sentence2.size();
        if (m != n) return false;
        unordered_set<string> s;
        for (auto e : similarPairs) s.insert(e[0] + "." + e[1]);
        for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
            string a = sentence1[i], b = sentence2[i];
            if (a != b && !s.count(a + "." + b) && !s.count(b + "." + a)) return false;
        }
        return true;
    }
};

Go Code
 1
 2
 3
 4
 5
 6
 7
 8
 9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
func areSentencesSimilar(sentence1 []string, sentence2 []string, similarPairs [][]string) bool {
	if len(sentence1) != len(sentence2) {
		return false
	}
	s := map[string]bool{}
	for _, e := range similarPairs {
		s[e[0]+"."+e[1]] = true
	}
	for i, a := range sentence1 {
		b := sentence2[i]
		if a != b && !s[a+"."+b] && !s[b+"."+a] {
			return false
		}
	}
	return true
}