Given n nodes labeled from 0 to n – 1 and a list of undirected edges (each edge is a pair of nodes), write a function to find the number of connected components in an undirected graph.
Example 1:
0 3
| |
1 --- 2 4
Given n = 5 and edges = [[0, 1], [1, 2], [3, 4]], return 2.
Example 2:
0 4
| |
1 --- 2 --- 3
Given n = 5 and edges = [[0, 1], [1, 2], [2, 3], [3, 4]], return 1.
Note:
You can assume that no duplicate edges will appear in edges. Since all edges are undirected,
[0, 1] is the same as [1, 0] and thus will not appear together in edges.
Solution:I use a map to store the relationship between them and the key is the index. We use Array list as a list of friends.Thus we can use DFS to solve this problem.
Time Complexity: O(n+e)
class Solution {
public int countComponents(int n, int[][] edges) {
HashMap<Integer,List<Integer>> map = new HashMap<>();
if(n < 1) return n;
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++){
map.put(i,new ArrayList<Integer>());//create a map to store.
}
for(int[] edge:edges){//add each other as a friend
map.get(edge[0]).add(edge[1]);
map.get(edge[1]).add(edge[0]);
}
Set<Integer> visited = new HashSet<>();//cause this problem is not about 0 or 1,
//thus we cannot use boolean array, we use set.
int count = 0;
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++){
if(visited.add(i)){
dfs(i,map,visited);
count++;//new dfs, means we have find one connected, this one is a new one, which count++
}
}
return count;
}
public void dfs(int i, HashMap<Integer,List<Integer>> map, Set<Integer> visited){
for(int j:map.get(i)){//get all its friends from the list
if(visited.add(j)){//if not visited, recursively call this function
dfs(j,map,visited);
}
}
}
}