Given a positive integer n
, return the punishment number of n
.
The punishment number of n
is defined as the sum of the squares of all integers i
such that:
1 <= i <= n
- The decimal representation of
i * i
can be partitioned into contiguous substrings such that the sum of the integer values of these substrings equalsi
.
Example 1:
Input: n = 10 Output: 182 Explanation: There are exactly 3 integers i in the range [1, 10] that satisfy the conditions in the statement: - 1 since 1 * 1 = 1 - 9 since 9 * 9 = 81 and 81 can be partitioned into 8 and 1 with a sum equal to 8 + 1 == 9. - 10 since 10 * 10 = 100 and 100 can be partitioned into 10 and 0 with a sum equal to 10 + 0 == 10. Hence, the punishment number of 10 is 1 + 81 + 100 = 182
Example 2:
Input: n = 37 Output: 1478 Explanation: There are exactly 4 integers i in the range [1, 37] that satisfy the conditions in the statement: - 1 since 1 * 1 = 1. - 9 since 9 * 9 = 81 and 81 can be partitioned into 8 + 1. - 10 since 10 * 10 = 100 and 100 can be partitioned into 10 + 0. - 36 since 36 * 36 = 1296 and 1296 can be partitioned into 1 + 29 + 6. Hence, the punishment number of 37 is 1 + 81 + 100 + 1296 = 1478
Constraints:
1 <= n <= 1000
Approach 01:
-
C++
-
Python
#include <string> using namespace std; class Solution { public: bool canPartition(const string& squareStr, int target, int index, int currentSum) { if (index == squareStr.length()) return currentSum == target; int tempSum = 0; for (int j = index; j < squareStr.length(); j++) { tempSum = tempSum * 10 + (squareStr[j] - '0'); if (tempSum + currentSum > target) break; if (canPartition(squareStr, target, j + 1, currentSum + tempSum)) return true; } return false; } int punishmentNumber(int n) { int totalSum = 0; for (int i = 1; i <= n; i++) { string squareStr = to_string(i * i); if (canPartition(squareStr, i, 0, 0)) totalSum += i * i; } return totalSum; } };
class Solution: def punishmentNumber(self, n: int) -> int: def can_partition(s, target, index, curr_sum): if index == len(s): return curr_sum == target temp_sum = 0 for j in range(index, len(s)): temp_sum = temp_sum * 10 + int(s[j]) if temp_sum + curr_sum > target: break if can_partition(s, target, j + 1, curr_sum + temp_sum): return True return False result = 0 for i in range(1, n + 1): square_str = str(i * i) if can_partition(square_str, i, 0, 0): result += i * i return result
Time Complexity:
punishmentNumber(n)
:Iterates from \( 1 \) to \( n \), performing \( O(n) \) operations.
canPartition(squareStr, target, index, currentSum)
:Uses a recursive approach to check possible partitions of the squared number, leading to an exponential complexity of \( O(2^m) \), where \( m \) is the length of
squareStr
.- Overall Time Complexity:
Since each number up to \( n \) is processed, the worst-case time complexity is \( O(n \cdot 2^m) \).
Space Complexity:
- Recursive Call Stack:
The depth of the recursion can be at most \( m \), leading to \( O(m) \) auxiliary space.
- String Storage:
Stores the squared value of each number as a string, contributing \( O(m) \) space per number.
- Overall Space Complexity:
\( O(m) \) in the worst case.