729. My Calendar I
Difficulty: Medium
Topics: Array
, Binary Search
, Design
, Segment Tree
, Ordered Set
You are implementing a program to use as your calendar. We can add a new event if adding the event will not cause a double booking.
A double booking happens when two events have some non-empty intersection (i.e., some moment is common to both events.).
The event can be represented as a pair of integers start
and end
that represents a booking on the half-open interval [start, end)
, the range of real numbers x
such that start <= x < end
.
Implement the MyCalendar
class:
-
MyCalendar()
Initializes the calendar object. -
boolean book(int start, int end)
Returnstrue
if the event can be added to the calendar successfully without causing a double booking. Otherwise, returnfalse
and do not add the event to the calendar.
Example 1:
- Input:
["MyCalendar", "book", "book", "book"]
[[], [10, 20], [15, 25], [20, 30]]
- Output:
[null, true, false, true]
- Explanation:
MyCalendar myCalendar = new MyCalendar();
myCalendar.book(10, 20); // return True
myCalendar.book(15, 25); // return False, It can not be booked because time 15 is already booked by another event.
myCalendar.book(20, 30); // return True, The event can be booked, as the first event takes every time less than 20, but not including 20.
Constraints:
0 <= start < end <= 109
- At most
1000
calls will be made tobook
.
Hint:
- Store the events as a sorted list of intervals. If none of the events conflict, then the new event can be added.
Solution:
We need to store each event and check if the new event conflicts with any of the existing events before booking it. Since at most 1000 calls to book
are allowed, we can store the events in a list and iterate through them to check for overlaps when booking new events.
Plan:
-
Storing Events: We'll maintain a list where each entry is a pair
[start, end]
representing the booked time intervals. - Check for Conflicts: Before adding a new event, we'll iterate through the list of booked events and check if the new event conflicts with any existing event. An overlap occurs if the new event's start time is less than the end time of an existing event and the new event's end time is greater than the start time of an existing event.
- Book Event: If no conflicts are found, we add the new event to our list of bookings.
Let's implement this solution in PHP: 729. My Calendar I
<?php
class MyCalendar {
/**
* @var array
*/
private $events;
/**
*/
function __construct() {
...
...
...
/**
* go to ./solution.php
*/
}
/**
* Books an event if it does not cause a double booking
*
* @param Integer $start
* @param Integer $end
* @return Boolean
*/
function book($start, $end) {
...
...
...
/**
* go to ./solution.php
*/
}
}
/**
* Your MyCalendar object will be instantiated and called as such:
* $obj = MyCalendar();
* $ret_1 = $obj->book($start, $end);
*/
// Example Usage:
$myCalendar = new MyCalendar();
var_dump($myCalendar->book(10, 20)); // true, no conflicts, booking added
var_dump($myCalendar->book(15, 25)); // false, conflict with [10, 20]
var_dump($myCalendar->book(20, 30)); // true, no conflicts, booking added
?>
Explanation:
Constructor (
__construct
): Initializes an empty array$events
to keep track of all booked events.-
Booking Function (
book
):- It takes the start and end of a new event.
- It iterates through the list of previously booked events and checks for any overlap:
- An overlap happens if the new event starts before an existing event ends (
$start < $bookedEnd
) and ends after an existing event starts ($end > $bookedStart
).
- An overlap happens if the new event starts before an existing event ends (
- If any overlap is found, the function returns
false
, meaning the event cannot be booked. - If no conflicts are found, the event is added to the
$events
array, and the function returnstrue
to indicate successful booking.
Time Complexity:
-
Booking an Event: Each call to
book
involves checking the new event against all previously booked events. This leads to a time complexity ofO(n)
for each booking operation, wheren
is the number of previously booked events. -
Space Complexity: The space complexity is
O(n)
because we store up ton
events in the array.
Example Walkthrough:
-
First Booking (
book(10, 20)
):- No previous events, so the event
[10, 20]
is successfully booked. - Output:
true
- No previous events, so the event
-
Second Booking (
book(15, 25)
):- The new event
[15, 25]
conflicts with the previously booked event[10, 20]
because there is an overlap in the time interval (15 is between 10 and 20). - Output:
false
- The new event
-
Third Booking (
book(20, 30)
):- The new event
[20, 30]
does not overlap with[10, 20]
because the start time of the new event is exactly when the first event ends (no overlap since it's a half-open interval). - Output:
true
- The new event
This simple approach efficiently handles up to 1000 events while maintaining clarity and correctness.
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