Given two lists A
and B
, and B
is an anagram of A
. B
is an anagram of A
means B
is made by randomizing the order of the elements in A
.
We want to find an index mapping P
, from A
to B
. A mapping P[i] = j
means the i
th element in A
appears in B
at index j
.
These lists A
and B
may contain duplicates. If there are multiple answers, output any of them.
For example, given
A = [12, 28, 46, 32, 50] B = [50, 12, 32, 46, 28]We should return
[1, 4, 3, 2, 0]as
P[0] = 1
because the 0
th element of A
appears at B[1]
,
and P[1] = 4
because the 1
st element of A
appears at B[4]
,
and so on.
Note:
A, B
have equal lengths in range [1, 100]
.A[i], B[i]
are integers in range [0, 10^5]
.Intuition
\nTake the example A = [12, 28, 46]
, B = [46, 12, 28]
. We want to know where the 12
occurs in B
, say at position 1
; then where the 28
occurs in B
, which is position 2
; then where the 46
occurs in B
, which is position 0
.
If we had a dictionary (hash table) D = {46: 0, 12: 1, 28: 2}
, then this question could be handled easily.
Algorithm
\nCreate the hash table D
as described above. Then, the answer is a list of D[A[i]]
for i = 0, 1, ...
.
Complexity Analysis
\nTime Complexity: , where is the length of .
\nSpace Complexity: .
\nAnalysis written by: @awice.
\n