International Morse Code defines a standard encoding where each letter is mapped to a series of dots and dashes, as follows: "a" maps to ".-", "b" maps to "-…", "c" maps to "-.-.", and so on.

For convenience, the full table for the 26 letters of the English alphabet is given below:

[".-","-…","-.-.","-..",".","..-.","–.","….","..",".—","-.-",".-..","–","-.","—",".–.","–.-",".-.","…","-","..-","…-",".–","-..-","-.–","–.."]
Now, given a list of words, each word can be written as a concatenation of the Morse code of each letter. For example, "cab" can be written as "-.-..–…", (which is the concatenation "-.-." + ".-" + "-…"). We’ll call such a concatenation, the transformation of a word.

Return the number of different transformations among all words we have.

Example:
Input: words = ["gin", "zen", "gig", "msg"]
Output: 2
Explanation:
The transformation of each word is:
"gin" -> "–…-."
"zen" -> "–…-."
"gig" -> "–…–."
"msg" -> "–…–."

There are 2 different transformations, "–…-." and "–…–.".
Note:

  • The length of words will be at most 100.
  • Each words[i] will have length in range [1, 12].
  • words[i] will only consist of lowercase letters.

Solution in python:

class Solution:
    def uniqueMorseRepresentations(self, words: List[str]) -> int:
        codes = [".-","-...","-.-.","-..",".","..-.","--.","....","..",".---","-.-",".-..","--","-.","---",".--.","--.-",".-.","...","-","..-","...-",".--","-..-","-.--","--.."]
        aset = set()
        result = ""
        for word in words:
            for char in word:
                result += codes[ord(char)-97]
            aset.add(result)
            result = ""
        return len(aset)
最后修改日期: 2021年2月9日

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