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Recursion in Java - Complete Guide With Examples and Practice Problems

Recursion in Java - Complete Guide With Examples and Practice Problems

IntroductionIf there is one topic in programming that confuses beginners more than anything else, it is recursion. Most people read the definition, nod their head, and then immediately freeze when they have to write recursive code themselves.The problem is not that recursion is genuinely hard. The problem is that most explanations start with code before building the right mental model. Once you have the right mental model, recursion clicks permanently and you start seeing it everywhere — in tree problems, graph problems, backtracking, dynamic programming, divide and conquer, and more.This guide covers everything from the ground up. What recursion is, how the call stack works, how to identify base cases and recursive cases, every type of recursion, common patterns, time and space complexity analysis, the most common mistakes, and the top LeetCode problems to practice.By the end of this article, recursion will not feel like magic anymore. It will feel like a natural tool you reach for confidently.What Is Recursion?Recursion is when a function calls itself to solve a smaller version of the same problem.That is the complete definition. But let us make it concrete.Imagine you want to count down from 5 to 1. One way is a loop. Another way is — print 5, then solve the exact same problem for counting down from 4 to 1. Then print 4, solve for 3. And so on until you reach the base — there is nothing left to count down.void countDown(int n) { if (n == 0) return; // stop here System.out.println(n); countDown(n - 1); // solve the smaller version}The function countDown calls itself with a smaller input each time. Eventually it reaches 0 and stops. That stopping condition is the most important part of any recursive function — the base case.The Two Parts Every Recursive Function Must HaveEvery correctly written recursive function has exactly two parts. Without both, the function either gives wrong answers or runs forever.Part 1: Base CaseThe base case is the condition under which the function stops calling itself and returns a direct answer. It is the smallest version of the problem that you can solve without any further recursion.Without a base case, recursion never stops and you get a StackOverflowError — Java's way of telling you the call stack ran out of memory.Part 2: Recursive CaseThe recursive case is where the function calls itself with a smaller or simpler input — moving closer to the base case with each call. If your recursive case does not make the problem smaller, you have an infinite loop.Think of it like a staircase. The base case is the ground floor. The recursive case is each step going down. Every step must genuinely bring you one level closer to the ground.How Recursion Works — The Call StackThis is the mental model that most explanations skip, and it is the reason recursion confuses people.Every time a function is called in Java, a new stack frame is created and pushed onto the call stack. This frame stores the function's local variables, parameters, and where to return to when the function finishes.When a recursive function calls itself, a new frame is pushed on top. When that call finishes, its frame is popped and execution returns to the previous frame.Let us trace countDown(3) through the call stack:countDown(3) called → frame pushed prints 3 calls countDown(2) → frame pushed prints 2 calls countDown(1) → frame pushed prints 1 calls countDown(0) → frame pushed n == 0, return → frame popped back in countDown(1), return → frame popped back in countDown(2), return → frame popped back in countDown(3), return → frame poppedOutput: 3, 2, 1The call stack grows as calls go deeper, then shrinks as calls return. This is why recursion uses O(n) space for n levels deep — each level occupies one stack frame in memory.Your First Real Recursive Function — FactorialFactorial is the classic first recursion example. n! = n × (n-1) × (n-2) × ... × 1Notice the pattern — n! = n × (n-1)!. The factorial of n is n times the factorial of n-1. That recursive structure makes it perfect for recursion.public int factorial(int n) { // base case if (n == 0 || n == 1) return 1; // recursive case return n * factorial(n - 1);}Dry Run — factorial(4)factorial(4)= 4 * factorial(3)= 4 * 3 * factorial(2)= 4 * 3 * 2 * factorial(1)= 4 * 3 * 2 * 1= 24The call stack builds up going in, then multiplications happen coming back out. This "coming back out" phase is called the return phase or unwinding of the stack.Time Complexity: O(n) — n recursive calls Space Complexity: O(n) — n frames on the call stackThe Two Phases of RecursionEvery recursive function has two phases and understanding both is critical.Phase 1: The Call Phase (Going In)This happens as the function keeps calling itself with smaller inputs. Things you do before the recursive call happen in this phase — in order from the outermost call to the innermost.Phase 2: The Return Phase (Coming Back Out)This happens as each call finishes and returns to its caller. Things you do after the recursive call happen in this phase — in reverse order, from the innermost call back to the outermost.This distinction explains why the output order can be surprising:void printBothPhases(int n) { if (n == 0) return; System.out.println("Going in: " + n); // call phase printBothPhases(n - 1); System.out.println("Coming out: " + n); // return phase}For printBothPhases(3):Going in: 3Going in: 2Going in: 1Coming out: 1Coming out: 2Coming out: 3This two-phase understanding is what makes problems like reversing a string or printing a linked list backwards via recursion feel natural.Types of RecursionRecursion is not one-size-fits-all. There are several distinct types and knowing which type applies to a problem shapes how you write the solution.1. Direct RecursionThe function calls itself directly. This is the most common type — what we have seen so far.void direct(int n) { if (n == 0) return; direct(n - 1); // calls itself}2. Indirect RecursionFunction A calls Function B which calls Function A. They form a cycle.void funcA(int n) { if (n <= 0) return; System.out.println("A: " + n); funcB(n - 1);}void funcB(int n) { if (n <= 0) return; System.out.println("B: " + n); funcA(n - 1);}Used in: state machines, mutual recursion in parsers, certain mathematical sequences.3. Tail RecursionThe recursive call is the last operation in the function. Nothing happens after the recursive call returns — no multiplication, no addition, nothing.// NOT tail recursive — multiplication happens after returnint factorial(int n) { if (n == 1) return 1; return n * factorial(n - 1); // multiply after return — not tail}// Tail recursive — recursive call is the last thingint factorialTail(int n, int accumulator) { if (n == 1) return accumulator; return factorialTail(n - 1, n * accumulator); // last operation}Why does tail recursion matter? In languages that support tail call optimization (like Scala, Kotlin, and many functional languages), tail recursive functions can be converted to iteration internally — no stack frame accumulation, O(1) space. Java does NOT perform tail call optimization, but understanding tail recursion is still important for interviews and functional programming concepts.4. Head RecursionThe recursive call happens first, before any other processing. All processing happens in the return phase.void headRecursion(int n) { if (n == 0) return; headRecursion(n - 1); // call first System.out.println(n); // process after}// Output: 1 2 3 4 5 (processes in reverse order of calls)5. Tree RecursionThe function makes more than one recursive call per invocation. This creates a tree of calls rather than a linear chain. Fibonacci is the classic example.int fibonacci(int n) { if (n <= 1) return n; return fibonacci(n - 1) + fibonacci(n - 2); // TWO recursive calls}The call tree for fibonacci(4): fib(4) / \ fib(3) fib(2) / \ / \ fib(2) fib(1) fib(1) fib(0) / \ fib(1) fib(0)Time Complexity: O(2ⁿ) — exponential! Each call spawns two more. Space Complexity: O(n) — maximum depth of the call treeThis is why memoization (caching results) is so important for tree recursion — it converts O(2ⁿ) to O(n) by never recomputing the same subproblem twice.6. Mutual RecursionA specific form of indirect recursion where two functions call each other alternately to solve a problem. Different from indirect recursion in that the mutual calls are the core mechanism of the solution.// Check if a number is even or odd using mutual recursionboolean isEven(int n) { if (n == 0) return true; return isOdd(n - 1);}boolean isOdd(int n) { if (n == 0) return false; return isEven(n - 1);}Common Recursion Patterns in DSAThese are the patterns you will see over and over in interview problems. Recognizing them is more important than memorizing solutions.Pattern 1: Linear Recursion (Do Something, Recurse on Rest)Process the current element, then recurse on the remaining problem.// Sum of arrayint arraySum(int[] arr, int index) { if (index == arr.length) return 0; // base case return arr[index] + arraySum(arr, index + 1); // current + rest}Pattern 2: Divide and Conquer (Split Into Two Halves)Split the problem into two halves, solve each recursively, combine results.// Merge Sortvoid mergeSort(int[] arr, int left, int right) { if (left >= right) return; // base case — single element int mid = (left + right) / 2; mergeSort(arr, left, mid); // sort left half mergeSort(arr, mid + 1, right); // sort right half merge(arr, left, mid, right); // combine}Pattern 3: Backtracking (Try, Recurse, Undo)Try a choice, recurse to explore it, undo the choice when backtracking.// Generate all subsetsvoid subsets(int[] nums, int index, List<Integer> current, List<List<Integer>> result) { if (index == nums.length) { result.add(new ArrayList<>(current)); return; } // Choice 1: include nums[index] current.add(nums[index]); subsets(nums, index + 1, current, result); current.remove(current.size() - 1); // undo // Choice 2: exclude nums[index] subsets(nums, index + 1, current, result);}Pattern 4: Tree Recursion (Left, Right, Combine)Recurse on left subtree, recurse on right subtree, combine or process results.// Height of binary treeint height(TreeNode root) { if (root == null) return 0; // base case int leftHeight = height(root.left); // solve left int rightHeight = height(root.right); // solve right return 1 + Math.max(leftHeight, rightHeight); // combine}Pattern 5: Memoization (Cache Recursive Results)Store results of recursive calls so the same subproblem is never solved twice.Map<Integer, Integer> memo = new HashMap<>();int fibonacci(int n) { if (n <= 1) return n; if (memo.containsKey(n)) return memo.get(n); // return cached int result = fibonacci(n - 1) + fibonacci(n - 2); memo.put(n, result); // cache before returning return result;}This converts Fibonacci from O(2ⁿ) to O(n) time with O(n) space — a massive improvement.Recursion vs Iteration — When to Use WhichThis is one of the most common interview questions about recursion. Here is a clear breakdown:Use Recursion when:The problem has a naturally recursive structure (trees, graphs, divide and conquer)The solution is significantly cleaner and easier to understand recursivelyThe problem involves exploring multiple paths or choices (backtracking)The depth of recursion is manageable (not too deep to cause stack overflow)Use Iteration when:The problem is linear and a loop is equally clearMemory is a concern (iteration uses O(1) stack space vs O(n) for recursion)Performance is critical and function call overhead mattersJava's stack size limit could be hit (default around 500-1000 frames for deep recursion)The key rule: Every recursive solution can be converted to an iterative one (usually using an explicit stack). But recursive solutions for tree and graph problems are almost always cleaner to write and understand.Time and Space Complexity of Recursive FunctionsAnalyzing complexity for recursive functions requires a specific approach.The Recurrence Relation MethodExpress the time complexity as a recurrence relation and solve it.Factorial:T(n) = T(n-1) + O(1) = T(n-2) + O(1) + O(1) = T(1) + n×O(1) = O(n)Fibonacci (naive):T(n) = T(n-1) + T(n-2) + O(1) ≈ 2×T(n-1) = O(2ⁿ)Binary Search:T(n) = T(n/2) + O(1) = O(log n) [by Master Theorem]Merge Sort:T(n) = 2×T(n/2) + O(n) = O(n log n) [by Master Theorem]Space Complexity Rule for RecursionSpace complexity of a recursive function = maximum depth of the call stack × space per frameLinear recursion (factorial, sum): O(n) spaceBinary recursion (Fibonacci naive): O(n) space (maximum depth, not number of nodes)Divide and conquer (merge sort): O(log n) space (depth of recursion tree)Memoized Fibonacci: O(n) space (memo table + call stack)Classic Recursive Problems With SolutionsProblem 1: Reverse a StringString reverse(String s) { if (s.length() <= 1) return s; // base case // last char + reverse of everything before last char return s.charAt(s.length() - 1) + reverse(s.substring(0, s.length() - 1));}Dry run for "hello":reverse("hello") = 'o' + reverse("hell")reverse("hell") = 'l' + reverse("hel")reverse("hel") = 'l' + reverse("he")reverse("he") = 'e' + reverse("h")reverse("h") = "h"Unwinding: "h" → "he" → "leh" → "lleh" → "olleh" ✅Problem 2: Power Function (x^n)double power(double x, int n) { if (n == 0) return 1; // base case if (n < 0) return 1.0 / power(x, -n); // handle negative if (n % 2 == 0) { double half = power(x, n / 2); return half * half; // x^n = (x^(n/2))^2 } else { return x * power(x, n - 1); }}This is the fast power algorithm — O(log n) time instead of O(n).Problem 3: Fibonacci With Memoizationint[] memo = new int[100];Arrays.fill(memo, -1);int fib(int n) { if (n <= 1) return n; if (memo[n] != -1) return memo[n]; memo[n] = fib(n - 1) + fib(n - 2); return memo[n];}Time: O(n) — each value computed once Space: O(n) — memo array + call stackProblem 4: Tower of HanoiThe classic recursion teaching problem. Move n disks from source to destination using a helper rod.void hanoi(int n, char source, char destination, char helper) { if (n == 1) { System.out.println("Move disk 1 from " + source + " to " + destination); return; } // Move n-1 disks from source to helper hanoi(n - 1, source, helper, destination); // Move the largest disk from source to destination System.out.println("Move disk " + n + " from " + source + " to " + destination); // Move n-1 disks from helper to destination hanoi(n - 1, helper, destination, source);}Time Complexity: O(2ⁿ) — minimum moves required is 2ⁿ - 1 Space Complexity: O(n) — call stack depthProblem 5: Generate All Subsets (Power Set)void generateSubsets(int[] nums, int index, List<Integer> current, List<List<Integer>> result) { result.add(new ArrayList<>(current)); // add current subset for (int i = index; i < nums.length; i++) { current.add(nums[i]); // include generateSubsets(nums, i + 1, current, result); // recurse current.remove(current.size() - 1); // exclude (backtrack) }}For [1, 2, 3] — generates all 8 subsets: [], [1], [1,2], [1,2,3], [1,3], [2], [2,3], [3]Time: O(2ⁿ) — 2ⁿ subsets Space: O(n) — recursion depthProblem 6: Binary Search Recursivelyint binarySearch(int[] arr, int target, int left, int right) { if (left > right) return -1; // base case — not found int mid = left + (right - left) / 2; if (arr[mid] == target) return mid; else if (arr[mid] < target) return binarySearch(arr, target, mid + 1, right); else return binarySearch(arr, target, left, mid - 1);}Time: O(log n) — halving the search space each time Space: O(log n) — log n frames on the call stackRecursion on Trees — The Natural HabitatTrees are where recursion truly shines. Every tree problem becomes elegant with recursion because a tree is itself a recursive structure — each node's left and right children are trees themselves.// Maximum depth of binary treeint maxDepth(TreeNode root) { if (root == null) return 0; return 1 + Math.max(maxDepth(root.left), maxDepth(root.right));}// Check if tree is symmetricboolean isSymmetric(TreeNode left, TreeNode right) { if (left == null && right == null) return true; if (left == null || right == null) return false; return left.val == right.val && isSymmetric(left.left, right.right) && isSymmetric(left.right, right.left);}// Path sum — does any root-to-leaf path sum to target?boolean hasPathSum(TreeNode root, int target) { if (root == null) return false; if (root.left == null && root.right == null) return root.val == target; return hasPathSum(root.left, target - root.val) || hasPathSum(root.right, target - root.val);}Notice the pattern in all three — base case handles null, recursive case handles left and right subtrees, result combines both.How to Think About Any Recursive Problem — Step by StepThis is the framework you should apply to every new recursive problem you encounter:Step 1 — Identify the base case What is the smallest input where you know the answer directly without any recursion? For arrays it is usually empty array or single element. For trees it is null node. For numbers it is 0 or 1.Step 2 — Trust the recursive call Assume your function already works correctly for smaller inputs. Do not trace through the entire recursion mentally — just trust it. This is the Leap of Faith and it is what makes recursion feel natural.Step 3 — Express the current problem in terms of smaller problems How does the answer for size n relate to the answer for size n-1 (or n/2, or subtrees)? This relationship is your recursive case.Step 4 — Make sure each call moves toward the base case The input must become strictly smaller with each call. If it does not, you have infinite recursion.Step 5 — Write the base case first, then the recursive case Always. Writing the recursive case first leads to bugs because you have not defined when to stop.Common Mistakes and How to Avoid ThemMistake 1: Missing or wrong base case The most common mistake. Missing the base case causes StackOverflowError. Wrong base case causes wrong answers.Always ask — what is the simplest possible input, and what should the function return for it? Write that case first.Mistake 2: Not moving toward the base case If you call factorial(n) inside factorial(n) without reducing n, you loop forever. Every recursive call must make the problem strictly smaller.Mistake 3: Trusting your brain to trace deep recursion Do not try to trace 10 levels of recursion in your head. Trust the recursive call, verify the base case, and check that each call reduces the problem. That is all you need.Mistake 4: Forgetting to return the recursive result// WRONG — result is computed but not returnedint sum(int n) { if (n == 0) return 0; sum(n - 1) + n; // computed but discarded!}// CORRECTint sum(int n) { if (n == 0) return 0; return sum(n - 1) + n;}Mistake 5: Modifying shared state without backtracking In backtracking problems, if you add something to a list before a recursive call, you must remove it after the call returns. Forgetting to backtrack leads to incorrect results and is one of the trickiest bugs to find.Mistake 6: Recomputing the same subproblems Naive Fibonacci computes fib(3) multiple times when computing fib(5). Use memoization whenever you notice overlapping subproblems in your recursion tree.Top LeetCode Problems on RecursionThese are organized by pattern — work through them in this order for maximum learning:Pure Recursion Basics:509. Fibonacci Number — Easy — start here, implement with and without memoization344. Reverse String — Easy — recursion on arrays206. Reverse Linked List — Easy — recursion on linked list50. Pow(x, n) — Medium — fast power with recursionTree Recursion (Most Important):104. Maximum Depth of Binary Tree — Easy — simplest tree recursion112. Path Sum — Easy — decision recursion on tree101. Symmetric Tree — Easy — mutual recursion on tree110. Balanced Binary Tree — Easy — bottom-up recursion236. Lowest Common Ancestor of a Binary Tree — Medium — classic tree recursion124. Binary Tree Maximum Path Sum — Hard — advanced tree recursionDivide and Conquer:148. Sort List — Medium — merge sort on linked list240. Search a 2D Matrix II — Medium — divide and conquerBacktracking:78. Subsets — Medium — generate all subsets46. Permutations — Medium — generate all permutations77. Combinations — Medium — generate combinations79. Word Search — Medium — backtracking on grid51. N-Queens — Hard — classic backtrackingMemoization / Dynamic Programming:70. Climbing Stairs — Easy — Fibonacci variant with memoization322. Coin Change — Medium — recursion with memoization to DP139. Word Break — Medium — memoized recursionRecursion Cheat Sheet// Linear recursion templatereturnType solve(input) { if (baseCase) return directAnswer; // process current return solve(smallerInput);}// Tree recursion templatereturnType solve(TreeNode root) { if (root == null) return baseValue; returnType left = solve(root.left); returnType right = solve(root.right); return combine(left, right, root.val);}// Backtracking templatevoid backtrack(choices, current, result) { if (goalReached) { result.add(copy of current); return; } for (choice : choices) { make(choice); // add to current backtrack(...); // recurse undo(choice); // remove from current }}// Memoization templateMap<Input, Output> memo = new HashMap<>();returnType solve(input) { if (baseCase) return directAnswer; if (memo.containsKey(input)) return memo.get(input); returnType result = solve(smallerInput); memo.put(input, result); return result;}FAQs — People Also AskQ1. What is recursion in Java with a simple example? Recursion is when a function calls itself to solve a smaller version of the same problem. A simple example is factorial — factorial(5) = 5 × factorial(4) = 5 × 4 × factorial(3) and so on until factorial(1) returns 1 directly.Q2. What is the difference between recursion and iteration? Iteration uses loops (for, while) and runs in O(1) space. Recursion uses function calls and uses O(n) stack space for n levels deep. Recursion is often cleaner for tree and graph problems. Iteration is better when memory is a concern or the problem is inherently linear.Q3. What causes StackOverflowError in Java recursion? StackOverflowError happens when recursion goes too deep — too many frames accumulate on the call stack before any of them return. This is caused by missing base case, wrong base case, or input too large for Java's default stack size limit.Q4. What is the difference between recursion and dynamic programming? Recursion solves a problem by breaking it into subproblems. Dynamic programming is recursion plus memoization — storing results of subproblems so they are never computed twice. DP converts exponential recursive solutions into polynomial ones by eliminating redundant computation.Q5. What is tail recursion and does Java support tail call optimization? Tail recursion is when the recursive call is the absolute last operation in the function. Java does NOT support tail call optimization — Java always creates a new stack frame for each call even if it is tail recursive. Languages like Scala and Kotlin (on the JVM) do support it with the tailrec keyword.Q6. How do you convert recursion to iteration? Every recursive solution can be converted to iterative using an explicit stack data structure. The call stack's behavior is replicated manually — push the initial call, loop while stack is not empty, pop, process, and push sub-calls. Tree traversals are a common example of this conversion.ConclusionRecursion is not magic. It is a systematic way of solving problems by expressing them in terms of smaller versions of themselves. Once you internalize the two parts (base case and recursive case), understand the call stack mentally, and learn to trust the recursive call rather than trace it completely, everything clicks.The learning path from here is clear — start with simple problems like Fibonacci and array sum. Move to tree problems where recursion is most natural. Then tackle backtracking. Finally add memoization to bridge into dynamic programming.Every hour you spend understanding recursion deeply pays dividends across the entire rest of your DSA journey. Trees, graphs, divide and conquer, backtracking, dynamic programming — all of them build on this foundation.

RecursionJavaBase CaseCall StackBacktrackingDynamic Programming
LeetCode 110: Balanced Binary Tree – Java Optimized DFS Solution Explained

LeetCode 110: Balanced Binary Tree – Java Optimized DFS Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 110 – Balanced Binary Tree is one of the most important binary tree interview problems.This problem teaches:Tree recursionHeight calculationDepth First Search (DFS)Bottom-up recursionOptimization techniquesIt is frequently asked in coding interviews because it checks whether you can:Traverse trees efficientlyAvoid repeated calculationsCombine recursion with conditionsOptimize brute force tree solutionsThis problem is also a foundation for advanced tree problems like:AVL TreesHeight-balanced treesDiameter of Binary TreeTree DP problemsProblem Link🔗 https://leetcode.com/problems/balanced-binary-tree/Problem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree:Return:trueif the tree is:height-balancedOtherwise return:falseWhat is a Balanced Binary Tree?A binary tree is balanced if:For every node,|height(left subtree) - height(right subtree)| <= 1Meaning:Left and right subtree heights should not differ by more than:1Example 1Inputroot = [3,9,20,null,null,15,7]Tree:3/ \9 20/ \15 7OutputtrueExplanation:Every node satisfies:height difference <= 1Example 2Inputroot = [1,2,2,3,3,null,null,4,4]Tree:1/ \2 2/ \3 3/ \4 4OutputfalseExplanation:Left subtree becomes much deeper than right subtree.Difference becomes greater than:1Key ObservationTo determine if tree is balanced:At every node we need:Height of left subtreeHeight of right subtreeCompare differenceThis naturally becomes a recursive DFS problem.Brute Force ApproachIntuitionFor every node:Calculate left heightCalculate right heightCompare differenceRecursively check childrenBrute Force Java Solutionclass Solution {public int height(TreeNode root) {if(root == null)return 0;return 1 + Math.max(height(root.left), height(root.right));}public boolean isBalanced(TreeNode root) {if(root == null)return true;int left = height(root.left);int right = height(root.right);if(Math.abs(left - right) > 1)return false;return isBalanced(root.left) && isBalanced(root.right);}}Problem with Brute ForceThe height function gets called repeatedly.For every node:Heights are recalculated again and again.This increases complexity significantly.Brute Force ComplexityTime ComplexityO(N²)because height calculation repeats.Space ComplexityO(H)for recursion stack.Optimized DFS ApproachInstead of:Calculating heights separatelyWe can:Calculate height and balance together.Core Optimization IdeaWhile calculating height:If subtree becomes unbalanced:Return negative value immediatelyThis avoids unnecessary computation.Optimized Java Solutionclass Solution {public int solve(TreeNode roo) {if(roo == null)return 0;int left = solve(roo.left);if(left < 0) {return -1;}int right = solve(roo.right);if(right < 0) {return -1;}if(Math.abs(left - right) > 1) {return -1000;}return 1 + Math.max(left, right);}public boolean isBalanced(TreeNode root) {int ans = solve(root);return ans < 0 ? false : true;}}Cleaner Optimized VersionWe can simplify negative returns using:-1consistently.Cleaner Java Solutionclass Solution {public int height(TreeNode root) {if(root == null)return 0;int left = height(root.left);if(left == -1)return -1;int right = height(root.right);if(right == -1)return -1;if(Math.abs(left - right) > 1)return -1;return 1 + Math.max(left, right);}public boolean isBalanced(TreeNode root) {return height(root) != -1;}}Why This WorksAt every node:Recursively calculate left heightRecursively calculate right heightIf difference > 1:Tree is unbalancedPropagate failure upward immediately.Dry RunInput1/ \2 2/ \3 3/ \4 4Step 1Start from leaf nodes:4 → height = 1Step 2Node:3gets:left = 1right = 1Difference:0Balanced.Height:2Step 3At node:2Left height:2Right height:0Difference:2Unbalanced.Return:-1Final ResultTree is:Not balancedReturn:falseTime Complexity AnalysisOptimized DFS SolutionTime ComplexityO(N)because every node is visited once.Space ComplexityO(H)where:H = height of treeWorst case:O(N)for skewed tree.Brute Force vs OptimizedApproachTime ComplexitySpace ComplexityBrute ForceO(N²)O(H)Optimized DFSO(N)O(H)Interview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:Instead of recalculating heights repeatedly, we combine height calculation and balance checking into a single DFS traversal.This demonstrates:Optimization skillsRecursive DFS understandingBottom-up tree processingCommon Mistakes1. Recalculating Heights RepeatedlyThis causes:O(N²)complexity.2. Forgetting Absolute DifferenceAlways use:Math.abs(left - right)3. Not Handling Null NodesBase case:if(root == null)return 0;is necessary.FAQsQ1. What is a balanced binary tree?A tree where left and right subtree heights differ by at most:1for every node.Q2. Why use DFS?Because height calculation naturally follows recursive depth traversal.Q3. Why return -1?It acts as a signal:Subtree already unbalancedQ4. Is this problem important for interviews?Very important.It is one of the most common tree optimization questions.ConclusionLeetCode 110 is an excellent binary tree optimization problem.It teaches:DFS traversalHeight calculationBottom-up recursionOptimization techniquesThe key insight is:Combine balance checking and height calculation in one DFS traversal.Once you understand this optimization pattern, many advanced tree problems become much easier.

LeetCodeBalanced Binary TreeJavaBinary TreeDFSTree HeightRecursionTree
LeetCode 104: Maximum Depth of Binary Tree – Java Recursive Solution Explained

LeetCode 104: Maximum Depth of Binary Tree – Java Recursive Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 104 – Maximum Depth of Binary Tree is one of the most important beginner tree problems in Data Structures and Algorithms.This problem teaches:Binary Tree TraversalDepth First Search (DFS)RecursionTree Height CalculationDivide and ConquerIt is one of the most frequently asked tree questions in coding interviews because it builds the foundation for:Tree recursionHeight problemsBalanced tree problemsDiameter problemsDFS traversalIf you are starting binary trees, this is one of the best problems to master first.Problem Link🔗 https://leetcode.com/problems/maximum-depth-of-binary-tree/Problem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree:Return:Maximum depth of the treeMaximum depth means:Number of nodes along the longest path from root to the farthest leaf node.Example 1Inputroot = [3,9,20,null,null,15,7]Tree: 3 / \ 9 20 / \ 15 7Output3Explanation:Longest path:3 → 20 → 15contains:3 nodesExample 2Inputroot = [1,null,2]Tree:1 \ 2Output:2Understanding Maximum DepthDepth means:How many levels exist in the treeFor example: 1 / \ 2 3 / 4Levels:Level 1 → 1Level 2 → 2,3Level 3 → 4Maximum depth:3Key ObservationThe depth of a tree depends on:Maximum depth of left subtreeandMaximum depth of right subtreeSo:Depth(root)=1 + max(leftDepth, rightDepth)This is the core recursive formula.Recursive IntuitionAt every node:Find depth of left subtreeFind depth of right subtreeTake maximumAdd current nodeThis naturally becomes a recursive DFS problem.Java Recursive Solutionclass Solution { public int maxDepth(TreeNode root) { if(root == null) return 0; int left = maxDepth(root.left); int right = maxDepth(root.right); return 1 + Math.max(left, right); }}Why This WorksAt every node:Recursively calculate left depthRecursively calculate right depthChoose bigger depthAdd:1for current node.This continues until leaf nodes.Dry RunInput 3 / \ 9 20 / \ 15 7Step 1Start from root:3Step 2Left subtree:9Depth:1Step 3Right subtree:20Its children:15 and 7Depth becomes:2Step 4At root:1 + max(1,2)Result:3Recursive Call FlowmaxDepth(3) ├── maxDepth(9) │ ├── 0 │ └── 0 │ └── maxDepth(20) ├── maxDepth(15) └── maxDepth(7)Then values return upward.Alternative BFS ApproachWe can also solve this using:Level Order Traversalusing a queue.Every level increases depth by:1BFS Java Solutionclass Solution { public int maxDepth(TreeNode root) { if(root == null) return 0; Queue<TreeNode> queue = new LinkedList<>(); queue.offer(root); int depth = 0; while(!queue.isEmpty()) { int size = queue.size(); for(int i = 0; i < size; i++) { TreeNode node = queue.poll(); if(node.left != null) queue.offer(node.left); if(node.right != null) queue.offer(node.right); } depth++; } return depth; }}DFS vs BFSApproachTechniqueSpaceDFSRecursionO(H)BFSQueueO(N)Time Complexity AnalysisRecursive DFS SolutionTime ComplexityO(N)because every node is visited once.Space ComplexityO(H)where:H = tree heightWorst case:O(N)for skewed tree.BFS SolutionTime ComplexityO(N)Space ComplexityO(N)queue may contain full level.Interview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:The depth of a node depends on the maximum depth between its left and right subtree. This naturally forms a recursive divide-and-conquer problem.This demonstrates:Tree recursion understandingDFS traversal knowledgeDivide and conquer thinkingCommon Mistakes1. Forgetting Base CaseAlways handle:if(root == null) return 0;2. Using Min Instead of MaxWe need:Longest pathnot shortest.3. Incorrect Depth CountingRemember to add:1for current node.FAQsQ1. What is maximum depth?It is the number of nodes in the longest root-to-leaf path.Q2. Why is recursion preferred?Tree problems naturally fit recursive structures.Q3. Can this be solved iteratively?Yes.Using BFS with queue.Q4. Is this problem important for interviews?Very important.It is one of the most fundamental tree recursion problems.Related ProblemsAfter mastering this problem, practice:Minimum Depth of Binary TreeBalanced Binary TreeDiameter of Binary TreeBinary Tree Level Order TraversalPath SumConclusionLeetCode 104 is one of the most important beginner binary tree problems.It teaches:Recursive DFSTree height calculationDivide and conquerBinary tree traversalThe key insight is:Maximum depth equals 1 + maximum depth of left and right subtree.Once this recursive pattern becomes clear, many advanced tree problems become easier to solve.

LeetCodeDepth of Binary TreeJavaBinary TreeDFSBFSRecursionTreeEasy
LeetCode 145: Binary Tree Postorder Traversal – Java Recursive & Iterative Solution Explained

LeetCode 145: Binary Tree Postorder Traversal – Java Recursive & Iterative Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 145 – Binary Tree Postorder Traversal is one of the most important tree traversal problems for beginners learning Data Structures and Algorithms.This problem teaches:Binary Tree TraversalDepth First Search (DFS)RecursionStack-based traversalTree traversal patternsPostorder traversal is extremely useful in advanced tree problems such as:Tree deletionExpression tree evaluationBottom-up computationsDynamic programming on treesProblem Link🔗 https://leetcode.com/problems/binary-tree-postorder-traversal/Problem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree, return the postorder traversal of its nodes' values.What is Postorder Traversal?In postorder traversal, nodes are visited in this order:Left → Right → RootUnlike preorder or inorder traversal, the root node is processed at the end.ExampleInputroot = [1,null,2,3]Tree Structure:1\2/3Postorder TraversalTraversal order:3 → 2 → 1Output:[3,2,1]Recursive Approach (Most Common)IntuitionIn postorder traversal:Traverse left subtreeTraverse right subtreeVisit current nodeThis naturally fits recursion because trees themselves are recursive structures.Recursive DFS VisualizationTraversal pattern:Left → Right → RootRecursive function:postorder(node.left)postorder(node.right)visit(node)Java Recursive Solution/*** Definition for a binary tree node.* public class TreeNode {* int val;* TreeNode left;* TreeNode right;* }*/class Solution {public void solve(List<Integer> list, TreeNode root) {if(root == null) return;solve(list, root.left);solve(list, root.right);list.add(root.val);}public List<Integer> postorderTraversal(TreeNode root) {List<Integer> list = new ArrayList<>();solve(list, root);return list;}}Dry Run – Recursive ApproachTree:1\2/3Step 1Start at:1Move left:nullReturn back.Step 2Move right to:2Move left to:3Left and right of 3 are null.Add:3Step 3Return to:2Add:2Step 4Return to:1Add:1Final Answer[3,2,1]Time Complexity – RecursiveTime ComplexityO(N)Every node is visited once.Space ComplexityO(H)Where:H = height of the treeRecursive call stack uses extra spaceWorst case:O(N)for skewed trees.Iterative Approach (Interview Follow-Up)The follow-up asks:Can you solve it iteratively?Yes.We use stacks to simulate recursion.Iterative Postorder IntuitionPostorder traversal order is:Left → Right → RootOne common trick is:Traverse in modified preorder:Root → Right → LeftReverse the result.After reversing, we get:Left → Right → Rootwhich is postorder traversal.Stack-Based Iterative LogicAlgorithmPush root into stack.Pop node.Add node value to answer.Push left child.Push right child.Reverse final answer.Java Iterative Solutionclass Solution {public List<Integer> postorderTraversal(TreeNode root) {LinkedList<Integer> ans = new LinkedList<>();if(root == null) return ans;Stack<TreeNode> stack = new Stack<>();stack.push(root);while(!stack.isEmpty()) {TreeNode node = stack.pop();ans.addFirst(node.val);if(node.left != null) {stack.push(node.left);}if(node.right != null) {stack.push(node.right);}}return ans;}}Dry Run – Iterative ApproachTree:1\2/3Step 1Push:1Step 2Pop:1Add at front:[1]Push right child:2Step 3Pop:2Add at front:[2,1]Push left child:3Step 4Pop:3Add at front:[3,2,1]Final Answer[3,2,1]Comparison of ApproachesApproachAdvantagesDisadvantagesRecursiveEasy to understandUses recursion stackIterativeBetter interview practiceSlightly harder logicInterview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:Postorder traversal processes nodes in Left → Right → Root order. Recursion naturally handles this traversal. Iteratively, we simulate recursion using a stack and reverse traversal order.This demonstrates strong tree traversal understanding.Common Mistakes1. Wrong Traversal OrderIncorrect:Root → Left → RightThat is preorder traversal.Correct postorder:Left → Right → Root2. Forgetting Null Base CaseAlways check:if(root == null) return;3. Incorrect Stack Push OrderFor iterative solution:Push left firstPush right secondbecause we reverse the result later.FAQsQ1. Why is postorder traversal useful?It is used in:Tree deletionExpression tree evaluationBottom-up dynamic programmingCalculating subtree informationQ2. Which approach is preferred in interviews?Recursive is simpler.Iterative is often asked as a follow-up.Q3. Can postorder traversal be done without stack or recursion?Yes.Using Morris Traversal.Q4. What is the difference between preorder, inorder, and postorder?TraversalOrderPreorderRoot → Left → RightInorderLeft → Root → RightPostorderLeft → Right → RootBonus: Morris Postorder TraversalMorris traversal performs tree traversal using:O(1)extra space.This is considered an advanced interview topic.ConclusionLeetCode 145 is an excellent beginner-friendly tree traversal problem.It teaches:DFS traversalRecursionStack simulationBinary tree fundamentalsThe key postorder pattern is:Left → Right → RootMastering this traversal helps in solving many advanced tree problems such as:Tree DPTree deletionExpression evaluationSubtree calculationsAdvanced DFS problems

LeetCodeBinary Tree Postorder TraversalBinary TreeTree TraversalJavaDFSStackRecursionEasy
LeetCode 94: Binary Tree Inorder Traversal – Java Recursive & Iterative Solution Explained

LeetCode 94: Binary Tree Inorder Traversal – Java Recursive & Iterative Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 94 – Binary Tree Inorder Traversal is one of the most important beginner-friendly tree problems in Data Structures and Algorithms.This problem helps you understand:Binary tree traversalDepth First Search (DFS)RecursionStack-based traversalTree interview fundamentalsIt is commonly asked in coding interviews because tree traversal forms the foundation of many advanced tree problems.Problem Link🔗 ProblemLeetCode 94: Binary Tree Inorder TraversalOfficial Problem:LeetCode Problem LinkProblem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree, return the inorder traversal of its nodes' values.What is Inorder Traversal?In inorder traversal, we visit nodes in this order:Left → Root → RightExampleInputroot = [1,null,2,3]Tree Structure:1\2/3Inorder TraversalStep-by-step:1 → 3 → 2Output:[1,3,2]Recursive Approach (Most Common)IntuitionIn inorder traversal:Traverse left subtreeVisit current nodeTraverse right subtreeThis naturally fits recursion because trees themselves are recursive structures.Recursive DFS VisualizationTraversal order:Left → Node → RightRecursive function:inorder(node.left)visit(node)inorder(node.right)Java Recursive Solution/*** Definition for a binary tree node.* public class TreeNode {* int val;* TreeNode left;* TreeNode right;* }*/class Solution {public void solve(List<Integer> list, TreeNode root) {if(root == null) return;solve(list, root.left);list.add(root.val);solve(list, root.right);}public List<Integer> inorderTraversal(TreeNode root) {List<Integer> list = new ArrayList<>();solve(list, root);return list;}}Dry Run – Recursive ApproachTree:1\2/3Step 1Start at:1Move left:nullReturn back.Add:1Step 2Move right to:2Move left to:3Add:3Return back.Add:2Final Answer[1,3,2]Time Complexity – RecursiveTime ComplexityO(N)Every node is visited once.Space ComplexityO(H)Where:H = height of treeRecursive call stack uses extra spaceWorst case:O(N)for skewed trees.Iterative Approach (Interview Follow-Up)The follow-up asks:Can you solve it iteratively?Yes.We use a stack to simulate recursion.Iterative Inorder IntuitionThe recursive order is:Left → Node → RightSo iteratively:Keep pushing left nodes into stackProcess current nodeMove to right subtreeStack-Based Traversal LogicAlgorithmWhile current node exists OR stack is not empty:Push all left nodesPop top nodeAdd node valueMove to right subtreeJava Iterative Solutionclass Solution {public List<Integer> inorderTraversal(TreeNode root) {List<Integer> ans = new ArrayList<>();Stack<TreeNode> stack = new Stack<>();TreeNode curr = root;while(curr != null || !stack.isEmpty()) {while(curr != null) {stack.push(curr);curr = curr.left;}curr = stack.pop();ans.add(curr.val);curr = curr.right;}return ans;}}Dry Run – Iterative ApproachTree:1\2/3Step 1Push:1Stack:[1]Step 2Pop:1Add:1Move right to:2Step 3Push:23Stack:[2,3]Step 4Pop:3Add:3Step 5Pop:2Add:2Final Answer[1,3,2]Comparison of ApproachesApproachAdvantagesDisadvantagesRecursiveEasy to write and understandUses recursion stackIterativeBetter interview practiceSlightly harder logicInterview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:In inorder traversal, we process nodes in Left → Root → Right order. Recursion naturally fits this traversal. For iterative traversal, we use a stack to simulate recursive calls.This demonstrates strong tree traversal understanding.Common Mistakes1. Wrong Traversal OrderIncorrect:Root → Left → RightThat is preorder traversal.Correct inorder:Left → Root → Right2. Forgetting Null Base CaseAlways check:if(root == null) return;3. Stack Handling ErrorsIn iterative traversal:Push all left nodes firstThen process nodeThen move rightFAQsQ1. Why is inorder traversal important?It is heavily used in:Binary Search TreesExpression treesTree reconstruction problemsQ2. What is the inorder traversal of a BST?It produces values in sorted order.Q3. Which approach is better for interviews?Recursive is easier.Iterative is preferred for deeper interview rounds.Q4. Can inorder traversal be done without stack or recursion?Yes.Using Morris Traversal with:O(1)space.Bonus: Morris Traversal (Advanced)Morris Traversal performs inorder traversal without recursion or stack.ComplexityTime ComplexityO(N)Space ComplexityO(1)This is an advanced interview optimization.ConclusionLeetCode 94 is one of the most fundamental tree traversal problems.It teaches:DFS traversalRecursionStack simulationBinary tree fundamentalsThe key inorder pattern is:Left → Root → RightMastering this problem builds a strong foundation for advanced tree interview questions like:BST validationTree iteratorsTree reconstructionMorris traversalKth smallest in BST

LeetCodeBinary Tree Inorder TraversalBinary TreeTree TraversalJavaDFSStackRecursionEasy
LeetCode 144: Binary Tree Preorder Traversal – Java Recursive & Iterative Solution Explained

LeetCode 144: Binary Tree Preorder Traversal – Java Recursive & Iterative Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 144 – Binary Tree Preorder Traversal is one of the most important beginner-friendly tree traversal problems in Data Structures and Algorithms.This problem helps you understand:Binary Tree TraversalDepth First Search (DFS)RecursionStack-based traversalTree traversal patternsPreorder traversal is widely used in:Tree copyingSerializationExpression treesDFS-based problemsHierarchical data processingIt is also one of the most commonly asked tree problems in coding interviews.Problem Link🔗 ProblemLeetCode 144: Binary Tree Preorder TraversalOfficial Problem:LeetCode Problem LinkProblem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree, return the preorder traversal of its nodes' values.What is Preorder Traversal?In preorder traversal, nodes are visited in this order:Root → Left → RightThe root node is processed first before traversing subtrees.ExampleInputroot = [1,null,2,3]Tree Structure:1\2/3Preorder TraversalTraversal order:1 → 2 → 3Output:[1,2,3]Recursive Approach (Most Common)IntuitionIn preorder traversal:Visit current nodeTraverse left subtreeTraverse right subtreeThis naturally fits recursion because trees themselves are recursive structures.Recursive DFS VisualizationTraversal pattern:Root → Left → RightRecursive function:visit(node)preorder(node.left)preorder(node.right)Java Recursive Solution/*** Definition for a binary tree node.* public class TreeNode {* int val;* TreeNode left;* TreeNode right;* }*/class Solution {public void solve(List<Integer> list, TreeNode root) {if(root == null) return;list.add(root.val);solve(list, root.left);solve(list, root.right);}public List<Integer> preorderTraversal(TreeNode root) {List<Integer> list = new ArrayList<>();solve(list, root);return list;}}Dry Run – Recursive ApproachTree:1\2/3Step 1Start at:1Add:1Move right to:2Step 2Add:2Move left to:3Step 3Add:3Final Answer[1,2,3]Time Complexity – RecursiveTime ComplexityO(N)Every node is visited once.Space ComplexityO(H)Where:H = height of treeRecursive call stack uses extra spaceWorst case:O(N)for skewed trees.Iterative Approach (Interview Follow-Up)The follow-up asks:Can you solve it iteratively?Yes.We use a stack to simulate recursion.Iterative Preorder IntuitionPreorder traversal order is:Root → Left → RightUsing a stack:Process current node immediatelyPush right child firstPush left child secondWhy?Because stacks follow:Last In First Out (LIFO)So left subtree gets processed first.Stack-Based Iterative LogicAlgorithmPush root into stack.Pop node.Add node value.Push right child.Push left child.Repeat until stack becomes empty.Java Iterative Solutionclass Solution {public List<Integer> preorderTraversal(TreeNode root) {List<Integer> ans = new ArrayList<>();if(root == null) return ans;Stack<TreeNode> stack = new Stack<>();stack.push(root);while(!stack.isEmpty()) {TreeNode node = stack.pop();ans.add(node.val);if(node.right != null) {stack.push(node.right);}if(node.left != null) {stack.push(node.left);}}return ans;}}Dry Run – Iterative ApproachTree:1\2/3Step 1Push:1Step 2Pop:1Add:[1]Push right child:2Step 3Pop:2Add:[1,2]Push left child:3Step 4Pop:3Add:[1,2,3]Final Answer[1,2,3]Comparison of ApproachesApproachAdvantagesDisadvantagesRecursiveEasy to understandUses recursion stackIterativeBetter interview practiceSlightly harder logicInterview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:Preorder traversal processes nodes in Root → Left → Right order. Recursion naturally handles this traversal. Iteratively, we use a stack and push the right child before the left child so the left subtree gets processed first.This demonstrates strong DFS and stack understanding.Common Mistakes1. Wrong Traversal OrderIncorrect:Left → Root → RightThat is inorder traversal.Correct preorder:Root → Left → Right2. Forgetting Null Base CaseAlways check:if(root == null) return;3. Wrong Stack Push OrderFor iterative traversal:Push right firstPush left secondOtherwise traversal order becomes incorrect.FAQsQ1. Why is preorder traversal useful?It is heavily used in:Tree cloningSerializationDFS traversalExpression treesQ2. Which approach is preferred in interviews?Recursive is simpler.Iterative is often asked as a follow-up.Q3. Can preorder traversal be done without stack or recursion?Yes.Using Morris Traversal.Q4. What is the difference between preorder, inorder, and postorder?TraversalOrderPreorderRoot → Left → RightInorderLeft → Root → RightPostorderLeft → Right → RootBonus: Morris Preorder TraversalMorris traversal performs preorder traversal using:O(1)extra space.This is considered an advanced interview topic.ConclusionLeetCode 144 is one of the most fundamental binary tree traversal problems.It teaches:DFS traversalRecursionStack simulationBinary tree fundamentalsThe key preorder pattern is:Root → Left → RightMastering this traversal builds a strong foundation for advanced tree problems such as:Tree serializationDFS-based problemsTree reconstructionExpression treesMorris traversal

LeetCodeBinary Tree Preorder TraversalBinary TreeTree TraversalJavaDFSStackRecursionEasy
LeetCode 102: Binary Tree Level Order Traversal – Java BFS Solution Explained

LeetCode 102: Binary Tree Level Order Traversal – Java BFS Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 102 – Binary Tree Level Order Traversal is one of the most important Binary Tree traversal problems for coding interviews.This problem introduces:Breadth First Search (BFS)Queue data structureLevel-by-level traversalTree traversal patternsInterview-level BFS thinkingUnlike DFS traversals like preorder, inorder, and postorder, this problem explores the tree level by level.This traversal is widely used in:Graph traversalShortest path problemsTree serializationZigzag traversalBFS-based interview questionsProblem Link🔗 https://leetcode.com/problems/binary-tree-level-order-traversal/Problem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree, return the level order traversal of its nodes' values.Traversal should happen:Level by levelLeft to rightExampleInputroot = [3,9,20,null,null,15,7]Tree Structure: 3 / \ 9 20 / \ 15 7Level Order TraversalLevel 1:[3]Level 2:[9,20]Level 3:[15,7]Final Output:[[3],[9,20],[15,7]]Understanding the ProblemThe main challenge is:Process nodes level by level.This is exactly what:Breadth First Search (BFS)is designed for.Why Queue is Used?A queue follows:First In First Out (FIFO)This ensures:Nodes are processed in insertion orderParent nodes are processed before child nodesLevels are traversed correctlyBrute Force IntuitionOne brute force idea is:Calculate height of treeTraverse each level separatelyStore nodes level by levelBrute Force ComplexityThis approach becomes inefficient because:Each level traversal may revisit nodesComplexity may become:O(N²)for skewed trees.Optimal BFS IntuitionInstead of traversing each level separately:Use a queueProcess nodes level by level naturallyAt every level:Store queue sizeProcess exactly those many nodesAdd children into queueMove to next levelKey BFS ObservationBefore processing a level:int size = queue.size();This tells us:How many nodes belong to the current level.BFS AlgorithmSteps1. Initialize QueueInsert root node.2. Process Until Queue Becomes EmptyWhile queue is not empty:Find current level sizeTraverse current levelStore valuesPush child nodes3. Store Current LevelAfter processing one level:ans.add(levelList);Java BFS Solution/** * Definition for a binary tree node. * public class TreeNode { * int val; * TreeNode left; * TreeNode right; * } */class Solution { public List<List<Integer>> levelOrder(TreeNode root) { List<List<Integer>> ans = new ArrayList<>(); Queue<TreeNode> queue = new LinkedList<>(); if(root == null) return ans; queue.offer(root); while(!queue.isEmpty()) { int size = queue.size(); List<Integer> level = new ArrayList<>(); for(int i = 0; i < size; i++) { root = queue.poll(); level.add(root.val); if(root.left != null) queue.offer(root.left); if(root.right != null) queue.offer(root.right); } ans.add(level); } return ans; }}Dry RunInputroot = [3,9,20,null,null,15,7]Tree: 3 / \ 9 20 / \ 15 7Initial Queue[3]Level 1Queue size:1Process:3Add children:9, 20Level result:[3]Queue now:[9,20]Level 2Queue size:2Process:9, 20Add children:15, 7Level result:[9,20]Queue now:[15,7]Level 3Queue size:2Process:15, 7Level result:[15,7]Queue becomes empty.Final Answer[[3],[9,20],[15,7]]Time Complexity AnalysisTime ComplexityO(N)Every node is visited exactly once.Space ComplexityO(N)Queue may store an entire level of nodes.DFS Alternative ApproachThis problem can also be solved using DFS recursion.Idea:Pass current level during recursionCreate new list when level appears first timeAdd node into correct level listJava DFS Solutionclass Solution { public void dfs(TreeNode root, int level, List<List<Integer>> ans) { if(root == null) return; if(level == ans.size()) { ans.add(new ArrayList<>()); } ans.get(level).add(root.val); dfs(root.left, level + 1, ans); dfs(root.right, level + 1, ans); } public List<List<Integer>> levelOrder(TreeNode root) { List<List<Integer>> ans = new ArrayList<>(); dfs(root, 0, ans); return ans; }}BFS vs DFS for Level Order TraversalApproachAdvantagesDisadvantagesBFSNatural level traversalUses queueDFSRecursive solutionSlightly harder intuitionInterview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:Level order traversal is a BFS problem because we process nodes level by level. A queue naturally supports this traversal order.This demonstrates strong BFS understanding.Common Mistakes1. Forgetting Queue SizeWithout storing:int size = queue.size();levels cannot be separated correctly.2. Using DFS IncorrectlySimple DFS alone does not guarantee level ordering.3. Forgetting Null CheckAlways handle:if(root == null)FAQsQ1. Why is BFS preferred here?Because BFS naturally processes nodes level by level.Q2. Can this problem be solved recursively?Yes.Using DFS with level tracking.Q3. What data structure is mainly used?Queue.Q4. Is Level Order Traversal important?Yes.It is one of the most frequently asked BFS tree problems.Related ProblemsAfter mastering this problem, practice:Binary Tree Zigzag Level Order TraversalAverage of Levels in Binary TreeRight Side View of Binary TreeBinary Tree Vertical Order TraversalMaximum Depth of Binary TreeConclusionLeetCode 102 is one of the most important BFS tree traversal problems.It teaches:BFS traversalQueue usageLevel-by-level processingTree traversal fundamentalsThe key idea is:Use queue size to separate levels.Once this intuition becomes clear, many BFS-based tree interview problems become much easier.

LeetCodeBinary Tree Level Order TraversalBFSQueueBinary TreeJavaTree TraversalMedium
LeetCode 124: Binary Tree Maximum Path Sum – Java DFS Solution Explained

LeetCode 124: Binary Tree Maximum Path Sum – Java DFS Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 124 – Binary Tree Maximum Path Sum is one of the most important and frequently asked hard-level binary tree interview problems.This problem teaches:Depth First Search (DFS)Bottom-up recursionTree Dynamic ProgrammingRecursive optimizationGlobal answer trackingIt is considered a classic interview problem because it combines:Tree traversalRecursive decision makingPath optimizationNegative value handlingMastering this problem helps in understanding advanced binary tree patterns used in:Diameter problemsTree DPMaximum path problemsGraph recursion problemsProblem Link🔗 https://leetcode.com/problems/binary-tree-maximum-path-sum/Problem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree:Return:Maximum path sum of any non-empty pathA path:Can start from any nodeCan end at any nodeMust follow parent-child connectionsCannot visit a node more than onceImportant:Path does NOT need to pass through rootExample 1Inputroot = [1,2,3]Tree: 1 / \ 2 3Output6Explanation:Best path:2 → 1 → 3Path sum:2 + 1 + 3 = 6Example 2Inputroot = [-10,9,20,null,null,15,7]Tree: -10 / \ 9 20 / \ 15 7Output42Explanation:Best path:15 → 20 → 7Sum:15 + 20 + 7 = 42Key ObservationAt every node:We have two important possibilities.Possibility 1Path continues upward to parent.In this case:We can choose only:ONE sidebecause path cannot split upward.Return value becomes:node + max(left, right)Possibility 2Current node becomes:Highest point of pathThen we can use:left + node + rightThis candidate updates global maximum answer.Core Recursive IdeaAt every node:Calculate left maximum contributionCalculate right maximum contributionIgnore negative pathsUpdate global answerReturn best single-side path upwardWhy Ignore Negative Paths?Negative paths reduce total sum.So:Math.max(path, 0)ensures:Negative contribution is discardedOnly profitable paths are consideredThis is the most important optimization.Your Java Solutionclass Solution { int max = Integer.MIN_VALUE; public int solve(TreeNode roo) { if(roo == null) return 0; int left = Math.max(solve(roo.left), 0); int right = Math.max(solve(roo.right), 0); max = Math.max(max, roo.val + left + right); return roo.val + Math.max(left, right); } public int maxPathSum(TreeNode root) { solve(root); return max; }}Why This WorksFor every node:We calculate:Best path passing through current nodewhich is:left + node + rightThis path may become global maximum.But while returning upward:We can only choose:one directionbecause paths cannot split.Dry RunInput -10 / \ 9 20 / \ 15 7Step 1Leaf nodes:9 → return 915 → return 157 → return 7Step 2At node:20Left:15Right:7Current best path:15 + 20 + 7 = 42Update:max = 42Return upward:20 + max(15,7)= 35Step 3At node:-10Left:9Right:35Candidate:9 + (-10) + 35 = 34Global maximum remains:42Final Answer42Recursive Visualizationsolve(-10) ├── solve(9) │ └── solve(20) ├── solve(15) └── solve(7)Global maximum gets updated during return phase.Brute Force ApproachA brute force approach would:Generate all possible pathsCalculate sumsTrack maximumBut number of paths becomes extremely large.This is inefficient.Brute Force ComplexityTime ComplexityCan become:O(N²)or worse depending on implementation.Optimized DFS ComplexityTime ComplexityO(N)because every node is visited once.Space ComplexityO(H)where:H = height of treeWorst case:O(N)for skewed tree.Important InsightTwo values exist at every node.1. Value Returned UpwardOnly one side allowed:node + max(left, right)2. Value Used for Global MaximumBoth sides allowed:left + node + rightThis distinction is the heart of the problem.Interview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:Every node acts as a potential highest point of a path. We compute the best path through that node while recursively returning the best single-side contribution upward.This demonstrates:Advanced DFS understandingTree DP conceptsRecursive optimizationHandling negative pathsCommon Mistakes1. Returning Both Sides UpwardIncorrect:left + node + rightA path cannot branch upward.2. Forgetting Negative Path HandlingAlways use:Math.max(value, 0)3. Assuming Path Must Pass RootThe path can exist entirely inside a subtree.4. Not Using Global VariableMaximum path may occur anywhere.FAQsQ1. Does path need to start from root?No.It can start and end anywhere.Q2. Why ignore negative sums?Negative paths reduce overall answer.Q3. Why can we return only one side?Because a path moving upward cannot split into two directions.Q4. Is this problem important for interviews?Extremely important.It is one of the most famous hard-level tree problems.Related ProblemsAfter mastering this problem, practice:Diameter of Binary TreeBalanced Binary TreeMaximum Depth of Binary TreeConclusionLeetCode 124 is one of the best problems for learning advanced binary tree recursion.It teaches:DFS optimizationTree dynamic programmingRecursive decision makingNegative path handlingGlobal answer trackingThe key insight is:Every node can become the highest point of a maximum path.Once this recursive pattern becomes clear, many advanced tree and graph problems become much easier to solve.

LeetCodeBinary Tree Maximum Path SumJavaBinary TreeDFSTreeRecursionDynamic Programming on TreesHard
LeetCode 543: Diameter of Binary Tree – Java DFS Solution Explained

LeetCode 543: Diameter of Binary Tree – Java DFS Solution Explained

IntroductionLeetCode 543 – Diameter of Binary Tree is one of the most popular binary tree interview problems.This problem teaches:Depth First Search (DFS)Tree height calculationRecursive traversalBottom-up recursionTree optimization techniquesIt is extremely important because it introduces a very common pattern in tree problems:Use recursion to calculate subtree heights while simultaneously updating a global answer.This same idea is used in:Balanced Binary TreeMaximum Path SumLongest ZigZag PathTree DP problemsProblem Link🔗 https://leetcode.com/problems/diameter-of-binary-tree/Problem StatementGiven the root of a binary tree:Return:Length of the diameter of the treeThe diameter is:The length of the longest path between any two nodes in the tree.This path:May pass through the rootMay not pass through the rootImportant NoteThe diameter is measured in:EDGESnot nodes.Example 1Inputroot = [1,2,3,4,5]Tree: 1 / \ 2 3 / \ 4 5Output3Explanation:Longest path:4 → 2 → 1 → 3Edges count:3Example 2Inputroot = [1,2]Tree: 1 / 2Output:1Understanding DiameterAt every node:Possible longest path through that node is:left subtree height + right subtree heightWhy?Because:One side contributes left edgesOther side contributes right edgesTogether they form a path.Key ObservationFor every node:Diameter through node=leftHeight + rightHeightWe compute this for all nodes.Maximum among them becomes answer.Brute Force ApproachIntuitionFor every node:Calculate left subtree heightCalculate right subtree heightCompute diameterRecursively repeat for childrenBrute Force ComplexityHeight gets recalculated repeatedly.Time ComplexityO(N²)Space ComplexityO(H)where:H = tree heightOptimized DFS ApproachInstead of separately calculating:HeightDiameterWe calculate both in one DFS traversal.Core IdeaWhile calculating subtree height:We also update:max diameterThis avoids repeated traversal.Java Solutionclass Solution { int max = Integer.MIN_VALUE; public int solve(TreeNode roo) { if(roo == null) return 0; int left = solve(roo.left); int right = solve(roo.right); max = Math.max(max, left + right); return 1 + Math.max(left, right); } public int diameterOfBinaryTree(TreeNode root) { solve(root); return max; }}Cleaner Optimized Versionclass Solution { int diameter = 0; public int height(TreeNode root) { if(root == null) return 0; int left = height(root.left); int right = height(root.right); diameter = Math.max(diameter, left + right); return 1 + Math.max(left, right); } public int diameterOfBinaryTree(TreeNode root) { height(root); return diameter; }}Why This WorksAt every node:Find left subtree heightFind right subtree heightCompute:left + rightUpdate global maximum diameterReturn current subtree height upwardDry RunInput 1 / \ 2 3 / \ 4 5Step 1Leaf nodes:4 → height = 15 → height = 13 → height = 1Step 2At node:2Left height:1Right height:1Diameter through node:1 + 1 = 2Update:max = 2Height of node 2:2Step 3At root:1Left height:2Right height:1Diameter:2 + 1 = 3Update:max = 3Final Answer3Recursive Visualizationheight(1) ├── height(2) │ ├── height(4) │ └── height(5) │ └── height(3)Diameter gets updated during return phase.Time Complexity AnalysisOptimized DFS SolutionTime ComplexityO(N)because every node is visited once.Space ComplexityO(H)where:H = tree heightWorst case:O(N)for skewed tree.Brute Force vs OptimizedApproachTime ComplexitySpace ComplexityBrute ForceO(N²)O(H)Optimized DFSO(N)O(H)Interview ExplanationIn interviews, explain:While recursively calculating subtree heights, we simultaneously compute the maximum possible path passing through every node.This demonstrates:DFS understandingBottom-up recursionOptimization skillsTree DP thinkingCommon Mistakes1. Counting Nodes Instead of EdgesDiameter measures:edgesnot nodes.2. Forgetting Global VariableDiameter must be updated across all nodes.3. Returning Diameter Instead of HeightRecursive function should return:heightnot diameter.FAQsQ1. Does diameter always pass through root?No.It can exist completely inside a subtree.Q2. Why use DFS?Because height calculation naturally follows recursive depth traversal.Q3. Why update diameter globally?Because longest path may occur at any node.Q4. Is this problem important for interviews?Very important.It is one of the most common recursive tree questions.ConclusionLeetCode 543 is one of the best problems for learning recursive tree optimization.It teaches:DFS traversalHeight calculationBottom-up recursionGlobal answer trackingThe key insight is:Diameter through a node equals left subtree height + right subtree height.Once you understand this pattern, many advanced binary tree problems become much easier.

LeetCodeDiameter of Binary TreeJavaBinary TreeDFSTreeRecursionEasy
Permutation with Spaces Explained Using Recursion & Decision Tree | Java Solution GFG

Permutation with Spaces Explained Using Recursion & Decision Tree | Java Solution GFG

IntroductionThe Permutation with Spaces problem is a classic recursion question that helps build a strong understanding of decision-making and backtracking patterns.Instead of generating permutations by rearranging characters, this problem focuses on inserting spaces between characters in all possible ways.What makes this problem powerful is its decision tree structure, which you’ve already visualized perfectly. In this article, we will directly connect that intuition with code.Link of Problem: GeeksforGeeks – Permutation with SpacesProblem StatementGiven a string s, generate all possible strings by placing:Either a spaceOr no spacebetween every pair of characters.Return all results in sorted order.ExampleInput:s = "ABC"Output:A B CA BCAB CABCUnderstanding Your Decision Tree (Very Important)Two Choices at Each Step:❌ Do NOT add space before the character✔️ Add space before the characterMapping TreeFrom diagram:At B:"AB" → no space"A B" → spaceAt C:From "AB":"ABC""AB C"From "A B":"A BC""A B C"Final Output (Leaf Nodes)As shown in your diagram:ABC, AB C, A BC, A B C📌 This is exactly what recursion generates.Key InsightAt every index (except first), we have:2 choices → space OR no spaceSo total combinations:2^(n-1)Approach: Recursion + Decision MakingIdeaFix the first characterFor every next character:Add space + characterAdd character directlyContinue recursivelyJava Code with Detailed Commentsimport java.util.*;class Solution { // List to store all results ArrayList<String> lis = new ArrayList<>(); void solve(String s, int ind, String curr) { // Base case: // If index reaches end of string, // we have formed one valid permutation if (ind == s.length()) { lis.add(curr); // store the result return; } // Choice 1: Add SPACE before current character // Example: "A" → "A B" solve(s, ind + 1, curr + " " + s.charAt(ind)); // Choice 2: Do NOT add space // Example: "A" → "AB" solve(s, ind + 1, curr + s.charAt(ind)); } ArrayList<String> permutation(String s) { // Start with first character (no space before it) String curr = "" + s.charAt(0); // Start recursion from index 1 solve(s, 1, curr); // Sort results as required in problem Collections.sort(lis); return lis; }}Step-by-Step Execution (Using Your Tree)For "ABC":Start → "A"At "B":"AB""A B"At "C":"ABC", "AB C""A BC", "A B C"Exactly matches your decision tree leaf nodes ✅Complexity AnalysisTime Complexity: O(2ⁿ)Space Complexity: O(2ⁿ)Why This Approach WorksRecursion explores every possible choiceEach level = one characterEach branch = decision (space / no space)Leaf nodes = final answersKey TakeawaysThis is a binary decision recursion problemAlways identify:ChoicesBase conditionYour decision tree = direct blueprint of recursionSame pattern applies to:SubsetsBinary choices problemsConclusionThe Permutation with Spaces problem becomes extremely simple once the decision tree is understood—and your diagram already captures that perfectly.The recursion directly follows the same structure:Every branch = one decisionEvery leaf = one answerMaster this pattern, and you’ll find many recursion problems much easier to solve.

MediumGeeksforGeeksRecursionJava
Queue Data Structure Complete Guide - Java Explained With All Operations

Queue Data Structure Complete Guide - Java Explained With All Operations

IntroductionIf you have been learning Data Structures and Algorithms, you have probably already spent time with arrays, linked lists, and stacks. Now it is time to meet one of the most important and widely used data structures in computer science — the Queue.Queue is not just a theoretical concept. It powers some of the most critical systems you use every day — from how your printer handles jobs, to how your CPU schedules tasks, to how Google Maps finds the shortest path between two locations. Understanding Queue deeply means understanding how real systems work.In this complete guide we will cover absolutely everything — what a Queue is, how it differs from a Stack, every type of Queue, all operations with code, Java implementations, time and space complexity, common interview questions, and the most important LeetCode problems that use Queue.What Is a Queue?A Queue is a linear data structure that follows the FIFO principle — First In First Out. This means the element that was added first is the one that gets removed first.Think of it exactly like a real-world queue (a line of people). The person who joined the line first gets served first. No cutting in line, no serving from the back — strict order from front to back.This is the fundamental difference between a Queue and a Stack:Stack → LIFO (Last In First Out) — like a stack of plates, you take from the topQueue → FIFO (First In First Out) — like a line of people, you serve from the frontReal Life Examples of QueueBefore writing a single line of code, let us understand where queues appear in real life. This will make every technical concept feel natural.Printer Queue — when you send multiple documents to print, they print in the order they were sent. The first document sent prints first.CPU Task Scheduling — your operating system manages running processes in a queue. Tasks get CPU time in the order they arrive (in basic scheduling).Customer Service Call Center — when you call a helpline and are put on hold, you are placed in a queue. The first caller on hold gets connected first.WhatsApp Messages — messages are delivered in the order they are sent. The first message sent is the first one received.BFS (Breadth First Search) — every time you use Google Maps or any navigation app to find the shortest path, it uses BFS internally which is entirely powered by a Queue.Ticket Booking Systems — online booking portals process requests in the order they arrive. First come first served.Queue Terminology — Key Terms You Must KnowBefore diving into code, let us get the vocabulary right:Front — the end from which elements are removed (dequeued). This is where the "first person in line" stands.Rear (or Back) — the end at which elements are added (enqueued). New arrivals join here.Enqueue — the operation of adding an element to the rear of the queue. Like joining the back of a line.Dequeue — the operation of removing an element from the front of the queue. Like the first person in line being served and leaving.Peek (or Front) — looking at the front element without removing it. Like seeing who is first in line without serving them yet.isEmpty — checking whether the queue has no elements.isFull — relevant for fixed-size queues, checking whether no more elements can be added.Types of QueuesThis is where most beginners get confused. There is not just one type of Queue — there are several variations each designed to solve specific problems.1. Simple Queue (Linear Queue)The most basic form. Elements enter from the rear and leave from the front. Strict FIFO, nothing fancy.Enqueue → [ 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 ] → Dequeue rear frontProblem with Simple Queue: In array-based implementation, once elements are dequeued from the front, those slots cannot be reused even if there is space. This wastes memory. This is why Circular Queue was invented.2. Circular QueueIn a Circular Queue, the rear wraps around to the front when it reaches the end of the array. The last position connects back to the first, forming a circle. This solves the wasted space problem of simple queues. [1] [2] [3] / \ [6] [4] \ / [5] ← rearUsed in: CPU scheduling, memory management, traffic light systems, streaming buffers.3. Double Ended Queue (Deque)A Deque (pronounced "deck") allows insertion and deletion from both ends — front and rear. It is the most flexible queue type.Enqueue Front → [ 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 ] → Dequeue FrontEnqueue Rear → [ 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 ] → Dequeue RearTwo subtypes:Input Restricted Deque — insertion only at rear, deletion from both endsOutput Restricted Deque — deletion only at front, insertion at both endsUsed in: browser history (back and forward), undo-redo operations, sliding window problems.4. Priority QueueElements are not served in FIFO order — instead each element has a priority and the element with the highest priority is served first regardless of when it was added.Think of an emergency room. A patient with a critical injury jumps ahead of someone with a minor cut even if they arrived later.Two types:Max Priority Queue — highest value = highest priorityMin Priority Queue — lowest value = highest priorityUsed in: Dijkstra's shortest path, Huffman encoding, A* search algorithm, task scheduling with priorities.5. Blocking QueueA thread-safe queue used in multi-threading. If the queue is empty, a thread trying to dequeue will wait (block) until an element is available. If the queue is full, a thread trying to enqueue will wait until space is available.Used in: Producer-Consumer problems, thread pool implementations, Java's java.util.concurrent package.Queue Operations and Time ComplexityEvery queue operation has a specific time complexity that you must know cold for interviews.OperationDescriptionTime ComplexityEnqueueAdd element to rearO(1)DequeueRemove element from frontO(1)Peek/FrontView front elementO(1)isEmptyCheck if queue is emptyO(1)SizeNumber of elementsO(1)SearchFind a specific elementO(n)Space Complexity: O(n) — where n is the number of elements stored.All core queue operations are O(1). This is what makes Queue so powerful — no matter how many elements are in the queue, adding and removing always takes constant time.Implementing Queue in Java — All WaysJava gives you multiple ways to use a Queue. Let us go through each one.Way 1: Using LinkedList (Most Common)LinkedList implements the Queue interface in Java. This is the most commonly used Queue implementation.import java.util.LinkedList;import java.util.Queue;Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();// Enqueue — add to rearqueue.offer(10);queue.offer(20);queue.offer(30);// Peek — view front without removingSystem.out.println(queue.peek()); // 10// Dequeue — remove from frontSystem.out.println(queue.poll()); // 10System.out.println(queue.poll()); // 20// Check emptySystem.out.println(queue.isEmpty()); // false// SizeSystem.out.println(queue.size()); // 1offer() vs add() — both add to the queue. add() throws an exception if the queue is full (for bounded queues). offer() returns false instead. Always prefer offer().poll() vs remove() — both remove from front. remove() throws an exception if queue is empty. poll() returns null. Always prefer poll().peek() vs element() — both view the front. element() throws exception if empty. peek() returns null. Always prefer peek().Way 2: Using ArrayDeque (Fastest)ArrayDeque is faster than LinkedList for Queue operations because it uses a resizable array internally with no node allocation overhead.import java.util.ArrayDeque;import java.util.Queue;Queue<Integer> queue = new ArrayDeque<>();queue.offer(1);queue.offer(2);queue.offer(3);System.out.println(queue.peek()); // 1System.out.println(queue.poll()); // 1System.out.println(queue.size()); // 2When to use ArrayDeque over LinkedList? Use ArrayDeque whenever possible for Queue or Stack operations. It is faster because it avoids the overhead of node objects that LinkedList creates for every element. In competitive programming and interviews, ArrayDeque is the preferred choice.Way 3: Using Deque (Double Ended Queue)import java.util.ArrayDeque;import java.util.Deque;Deque<Integer> deque = new ArrayDeque<>();// Add to frontdeque.offerFirst(10);// Add to reardeque.offerLast(20);deque.offerLast(30);// Remove from frontSystem.out.println(deque.pollFirst()); // 10// Remove from rearSystem.out.println(deque.pollLast()); // 30// Peek front and rearSystem.out.println(deque.peekFirst()); // 20System.out.println(deque.peekLast()); // 20Way 4: Using PriorityQueueimport java.util.PriorityQueue;// Min Heap — smallest element has highest priorityPriorityQueue<Integer> minPQ = new PriorityQueue<>();minPQ.offer(30);minPQ.offer(10);minPQ.offer(20);System.out.println(minPQ.poll()); // 10 — smallest comes out first// Max Heap — largest element has highest priorityPriorityQueue<Integer> maxPQ = new PriorityQueue<>((a, b) -> b - a);maxPQ.offer(30);maxPQ.offer(10);maxPQ.offer(20);System.out.println(maxPQ.poll()); // 30 — largest comes out firstWay 5: Implementing Queue From Scratch Using ArrayUnderstanding the underlying implementation helps you in interviews when asked to build one from scratch.class MyQueue { private int[] arr; private int front; private int rear; private int size; private int capacity; public MyQueue(int capacity) { this.capacity = capacity; arr = new int[capacity]; front = 0; rear = -1; size = 0; } public void enqueue(int val) { if (size == capacity) { System.out.println("Queue is full!"); return; } rear = (rear + 1) % capacity; // circular wrapping arr[rear] = val; size++; } public int dequeue() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Queue is empty!"); return -1; } int val = arr[front]; front = (front + 1) % capacity; // circular wrapping size--; return val; } public int peek() { if (isEmpty()) return -1; return arr[front]; } public boolean isEmpty() { return size == 0; } public int size() { return size; }}Notice the % capacity in enqueue and dequeue — that is what makes it a Circular Queue. Without this, once the rear reaches the end of the array, you cannot add more even if front has moved forward and freed up space.Way 6: Implementing Queue Using Two StacksThis is a very popular interview question — implement a Queue using two stacks. The idea is to use one stack for enqueue and another for dequeue.class QueueUsingTwoStacks { Stack<Integer> s1 = new Stack<>(); // for enqueue Stack<Integer> s2 = new Stack<>(); // for dequeue public void enqueue(int val) { s1.push(val); // always push to s1 } public int dequeue() { if (s2.isEmpty()) { // transfer all elements from s1 to s2 // this reverses the order, giving FIFO behavior while (!s1.isEmpty()) { s2.push(s1.pop()); } } return s2.pop(); } public int peek() { if (s2.isEmpty()) { while (!s1.isEmpty()) { s2.push(s1.pop()); } } return s2.peek(); } public boolean isEmpty() { return s1.isEmpty() && s2.isEmpty(); }}Why does this work?When you transfer elements from s1 to s2, the order reverses. The element that was added first to s1 ends up on top of s2 — which means it gets dequeued first. FIFO achieved using two LIFOs!Amortized time complexity: Each element is pushed and popped at most twice (once in s1, once in s2). So dequeue is O(1) amortized even though individual calls might take O(n).This is LeetCode 232 — Implement Queue using Stacks.Queue vs Stack — Side by SideFeatureQueueStackPrincipleFIFO — First In First OutLIFO — Last In First OutInsert atRearTopRemove fromFrontTopReal lifeLine of peopleStack of platesJava classLinkedList, ArrayDequeStack, ArrayDequeMain useBFS, schedulingDFS, backtracking, parsingPeekFront elementTop elementBFS — The Most Important Application of QueueBreadth First Search (BFS) is the single most important algorithm that uses a Queue. Understanding BFS is why Queue matters so much in DSA.BFS explores a graph or tree level by level — all nodes at distance 1 first, then all at distance 2, and so on. A Queue naturally enforces this level-by-level behavior.public void bfs(int start, List<List<Integer>> graph) { Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>(); boolean[] visited = new boolean[graph.size()]; queue.offer(start); visited[start] = true; while (!queue.isEmpty()) { int node = queue.poll(); // process front node System.out.print(node + " "); for (int neighbor : graph.get(node)) { if (!visited[neighbor]) { visited[neighbor] = true; queue.offer(neighbor); // add unvisited neighbors to rear } } }}Why Queue and not Stack for BFS? Queue ensures you process all neighbors of a node before going deeper. Stack would take you deep into one path first — that is DFS, not BFS. The FIFO property is what guarantees level-by-level exploration.BFS with Queue is used in:Shortest path in unweighted graphsLevel order traversal of treesFinding connected componentsWord ladder problemsRotten oranges, flood fill, and matrix BFS problemsLevel Order Traversal — BFS on TreesOne of the most common Queue problems in interviews is Level Order Traversal of a binary tree.public List<List<Integer>> levelOrder(TreeNode root) { List<List<Integer>> result = new ArrayList<>(); if (root == null) return result; Queue<TreeNode> queue = new LinkedList<>(); queue.offer(root); while (!queue.isEmpty()) { int levelSize = queue.size(); // number of nodes at current level List<Integer> level = new ArrayList<>(); for (int i = 0; i < levelSize; i++) { TreeNode node = queue.poll(); level.add(node.val); if (node.left != null) queue.offer(node.left); if (node.right != null) queue.offer(node.right); } result.add(level); } return result;}The key trick here is using queue.size() at the start of each while loop iteration to know exactly how many nodes belong to the current level. Process exactly that many nodes, then move to the next level.This is LeetCode 102 — Binary Tree Level Order Traversal.Sliding Window Maximum — Monotonic DequeOne of the most impressive Queue applications is the Sliding Window Maximum problem using a Monotonic Deque. This is the queue equivalent of the Monotonic Stack pattern you saw in stack problems.The idea — maintain a deque that stores indices of elements in decreasing order. The front always holds the index of the maximum element in the current window.public int[] maxSlidingWindow(int[] nums, int k) { Deque<Integer> deque = new ArrayDeque<>(); // stores indices int[] result = new int[nums.length - k + 1]; int idx = 0; for (int i = 0; i < nums.length; i++) { // remove indices that are out of the current window while (!deque.isEmpty() && deque.peekFirst() < i - k + 1) { deque.pollFirst(); } // remove indices whose values are smaller than current // they can never be the maximum for any future window while (!deque.isEmpty() && nums[deque.peekLast()] < nums[i]) { deque.pollLast(); } deque.offerLast(i); // window is fully formed, record maximum (front of deque) if (i >= k - 1) { result[idx++] = nums[deque.peekFirst()]; } } return result;}This gives O(n) time for what would otherwise be an O(n×k) problem. This is LeetCode 239 — Sliding Window Maximum.Java Queue Interface — Complete Method ReferenceHere is every method you will ever need from Java's Queue and Deque interfaces:Queue Methods:offer(e) — add to rear, returns false if full (preferred over add) poll() — remove from front, returns null if empty (preferred over remove) peek() — view front without removing, returns null if empty (preferred over element) isEmpty() — returns true if no elements size() — returns number of elements contains(o) — returns true if element existsDeque Additional Methods:offerFirst(e) — add to front offerLast(e) — add to rear pollFirst() — remove from front pollLast() — remove from rear peekFirst() — view front peekLast() — view rearPriorityQueue Specific:offer(e) — add with natural ordering or custom comparator poll() — remove element with highest priority peek() — view highest priority element without removingCommon Interview Questions About QueueThese are the questions interviewers ask to test your understanding of queues conceptually — not just coding.Q1. What is the difference between Queue and Stack? Queue is FIFO — elements are removed in the order they were added. Stack is LIFO — the most recently added element is removed first. Queue removes from the front, Stack removes from the top.Q2. Why is ArrayDeque preferred over LinkedList for Queue in Java? ArrayDeque uses a resizable array internally and has better cache locality and no node allocation overhead. LinkedList creates a new node object for every element added, which means more garbage collection pressure. ArrayDeque is faster in practice for most Queue use cases.Q3. When would you use a PriorityQueue instead of a regular Queue? When the order of processing depends on priority rather than arrival order. For example in a hospital, critical patients are treated before minor cases regardless of when they arrived. Or in Dijkstra's algorithm, always processing the shortest known distance first.Q4. How is Queue used in BFS? BFS uses a Queue to explore nodes level by level. The starting node is enqueued first. Each time a node is dequeued, all its unvisited neighbors are enqueued. Since Queue is FIFO, all neighbors of a node are processed before going deeper — guaranteeing level-by-level exploration.Q5. What is the difference between poll() and remove() in Java Queue? Both remove the front element. remove() throws NoSuchElementException if the queue is empty. poll() returns null instead of throwing. Always use poll() for safer code.Q6. Can a Queue have duplicates? Yes. Queue does not have any restriction on duplicate values unlike Sets. The same value can appear multiple times in a Queue.Q7. What is a Blocking Queue and when is it used? A Blocking Queue is a thread-safe Queue used in multi-threaded applications. When a thread tries to dequeue from an empty queue, it blocks (waits) until an element is available. When a thread tries to enqueue into a full queue, it blocks until space is available. Used in Producer-Consumer patterns.Top LeetCode Problems on QueueHere are the most important LeetCode problems that use Queue — organized from beginner to advanced:Beginner Level:232. Implement Queue using Stacks — implement Queue with two stacks, classic interview question225. Implement Stack using Queues — reverse of 232, implement Stack using Queue933. Number of Recent Calls — sliding window with QueueIntermediate Level:102. Binary Tree Level Order Traversal — BFS on tree, must know107. Binary Tree Level Order Traversal II — same but bottom up994. Rotting Oranges — multi-source BFS on grid1091. Shortest Path in Binary Matrix — BFS shortest path542. 01 Matrix — multi-source BFS, distance to nearest 0127. Word Ladder — BFS on word graph, classicAdvanced Level:239. Sliding Window Maximum — monotonic deque, must know862. Shortest Subarray with Sum at Least K — monotonic deque with prefix sums407. Trapping Rain Water II — 3D BFS with priority queue787. Cheapest Flights Within K Stops — BFS with constraintsQueue Cheat Sheet — Everything at a GlanceCreate a Queue:Queue<Integer> q = new LinkedList<>(); // standardQueue<Integer> q = new ArrayDeque<>(); // faster, preferredDeque<Integer> dq = new ArrayDeque<>(); // double endedPriorityQueue<Integer> pq = new PriorityQueue<>(); // min heapPriorityQueue<Integer> pq = new PriorityQueue<>((a,b) -> b-a); // max heapCore Operations:q.offer(x); // enqueueq.poll(); // dequeueq.peek(); // front elementq.isEmpty(); // check emptyq.size(); // number of elementsDeque Operations:dq.offerFirst(x); // add to frontdq.offerLast(x); // add to reardq.pollFirst(); // remove from frontdq.pollLast(); // remove from reardq.peekFirst(); // view frontdq.peekLast(); // view rearBFS Template:Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();queue.offer(start);visited[start] = true;while (!queue.isEmpty()) { int node = queue.poll(); for (int neighbor : graph.get(node)) { if (!visited[neighbor]) { visited[neighbor] = true; queue.offer(neighbor); } }}ConclusionQueue is one of those data structures that appears simple on the surface but has incredible depth once you start exploring its variations and applications. From the basic FIFO concept to Circular Queues, Deques, Priority Queues, Monotonic Deques, and BFS — each layer adds a new tool to your problem-solving arsenal.Here is the learning path to follow based on everything covered in this guide:Start with understanding FIFO vs LIFO and when each applies. Then get comfortable with Java's Queue interface — offer, poll, peek. Practice the BFS template until it feels automatic. Then move to Level Order Traversal problems. Once BFS clicks, tackle multi-source BFS problems like Rotting Oranges. Finally learn the Monotonic Deque pattern for sliding window problems.Master these and you will handle every Queue problem in any coding interview with confidence.

QueueData StructureJavaBFSDequePriority QueueCircular Queue
LeetCode 784 Letter Case Permutation | Recursion & Backtracking Java Solution

LeetCode 784 Letter Case Permutation | Recursion & Backtracking Java Solution

IntroductionThe Letter Case Permutation problem is a classic example of recursion and backtracking, often asked in coding interviews and frequently searched by learners preparing for platforms like LeetCode.This problem helps in understanding:Decision-making at each stepRecursive branchingString manipulationIn this article, we’ll break down the intuition, visualize the decision process using your decision tree, and implement an efficient Java solution.🔗 Problem LinkLeetCode: Letter Case PermutationProblem StatementGiven a string s, you can transform each alphabet character into:LowercaseUppercaseDigits remain unchanged.👉 Return all possible strings formed by these transformations.ExamplesExample 1Input:s = "a1b2"Output:["a1b2","a1B2","A1b2","A1B2"]Example 2Input:s = "3z4"Output:["3z4","3Z4"]Key InsightAt each character:If it's a digit → only one choiceIf it's a letter → two choices:lowercase OR uppercaseSo total combinations:2^(number of letters)Intuition (Using Your Decision Tree)For input: "a1b2"Start from index 0: "" / \ "a" "A" | | "a1" "A1" / \ / \ "a1b" "a1B" "A1b" "A1B" | | | | "a1b2" "a1B2" "A1b2" "A1B2"Understanding the TreeAt 'a' → branch into 'a' and 'A''1' → no branching (digit)'b' → again branching'2' → no branching📌 Leaf nodes = final answersApproach: Recursion + BacktrackingIdeaTraverse the string character by characterIf digit → move forwardIf letter → branch into:lowercaseuppercaseJava Codeimport java.util.*;class Solution { // List to store all results List<String> lis = new ArrayList<>(); public void solve(String s, int ind, String ans) { // Base case: reached end of string if (ind == s.length()) { lis.add(ans); // store generated string return; } char ch = s.charAt(ind); // If character is a digit → only one option if (ch >= '0' && ch <= '9') { solve(s, ind + 1, ans + ch); } else { // Choice 1: convert to lowercase solve(s, ind + 1, ans + Character.toLowerCase(ch)); // Choice 2: convert to uppercase solve(s, ind + 1, ans + Character.toUpperCase(ch)); } } public List<String> letterCasePermutation(String s) { solve(s, 0, ""); // start recursion return lis; }}Step-by-Step ExecutionFor "a1b2":Start → ""'a' → "a", "A"'1' → "a1", "A1"'b' → "a1b", "a1B", "A1b", "A1B"'2' → final stringsComplexity AnalysisTime Complexity: O(2^n)(n = number of letters)Space Complexity: O(2^n)(for storing results)Why This Approach WorksRecursion explores all possibilitiesEach letter creates a branching pointDigits pass through unchangedBacktracking ensures all combinations are generatedKey TakeawaysThis is a binary decision recursion problemLetters → 2 choicesDigits → 1 choiceDecision tree directly maps to recursionPattern similar to:SubsetsPermutations with conditionsWhen This Problem Is AskedCommon in:Coding interviewsRecursion/backtracking roundsString manipulation problemsConclusionThe Letter Case Permutation problem is a perfect example of how recursion can be used to explore all possible combinations efficiently.Once the decision tree is clear, the implementation becomes straightforward. This pattern is widely used in many advanced problems, making it essential to master.Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)1. Why don’t digits create branches?Because they have only one valid form.2. What is the main concept used?Recursion with decision-making (backtracking).3. Can this be solved iteratively?Yes, using BFS or iterative expansion, but recursion is more intuitive.

LeetCodeMediumJavaRecursion
LeetCode 22 Generate Parentheses | Backtracking Java Solution Explained

LeetCode 22 Generate Parentheses | Backtracking Java Solution Explained

IntroductionThe Generate Parentheses problem is one of the most important and frequently asked backtracking questions in coding interviews.At first glance, it may look like a simple string generation problem—but the real challenge is to generate only valid (well-formed) parentheses combinations.This problem is a perfect example of:Constraint-based recursionBacktracking with conditionsDecision tree pruningIn this article, we’ll break down the intuition, understand the constraints, and implement a clean and efficient solution.🔗 Problem LinkLeetCode: Generate ParenthesesProblem StatementGiven n pairs of parentheses:👉 Generate all combinations of well-formed parenthesesExamplesExample 1Input:n = 3Output:["((()))","(()())","(())()","()(())","()()()"]Example 2Input:n = 1Output:["()"]Key InsightWe are not generating all possible strings—we are generating only valid parentheses.Rules of Valid ParenthesesNumber of ( must equal number of )At any point:closing brackets should never exceed opening bracketsIntuition (Decision Making)At every step, we have two choices:Add "(" OR Add ")"But we cannot always take both choices.Valid ConditionsWhen can we add "("?If open > 0When can we add ")"?If close > open👉 This ensures the string always remains valid.Decision Tree (n = 3)👉 You can add your tree diagram here for better visualization.Conceptual FlowStart: ""→ "(" → "(("→ "(((" → "((()"→ ...Invalid paths like ")(" are never explored because of constraints.Approach: Backtracking with ConstraintsIdeaKeep track of:Remaining open bracketsRemaining close bracketsBuild string step by stepOnly take valid decisionsJava Codeimport java.util.*;class Solution {// List to store all valid combinationsList<String> lis = new ArrayList<>();public void solve(int open, int close, String curr) {// Base case: no brackets leftif (open == 0 && close == 0) {lis.add(curr); // valid combinationreturn;}// Choice 1: Add opening bracket "("// Allowed only if we still have opening brackets leftif (open > 0) {solve(open - 1, close, curr + "(");}// Choice 2: Add closing bracket ")"// Allowed only if closing brackets > opening bracketsif (open < close) {solve(open, close - 1, curr + ")");}}public List<String> generateParenthesis(int n) {solve(n, n, ""); // start recursionreturn lis;}}Step-by-Step Execution (n = 2)Start: ""→ "("→ "(("→ "(())"→ "()"→ "()()"Complexity AnalysisTime Complexity: O(4ⁿ / √n) (Catalan Number)Space Complexity: O(n) recursion stackWhy Catalan Number?The number of valid parentheses combinations is:Cn = (1 / (n+1)) * (2n choose n)Why This Approach WorksIt avoids invalid combinations earlyUses constraints to prune recursion treeGenerates only valid resultsEfficient compared to brute force❌ Naive Approach (Why It Fails)Generate all combinations of ( and ):Total combinations = 2^(2n)Then filter valid ones👉 Very inefficient → TLEKey TakeawaysThis is a constraint-based recursion problemAlways:Add "(" if availableAdd ")" only if validBacktracking avoids invalid pathsImportant pattern for interviewsCommon Interview VariationsValid parentheses checkingLongest valid parenthesesRemove invalid parenthesesBalanced expressionsConclusionThe Generate Parentheses problem is a must-know backtracking problem. It teaches how to apply constraints during recursion to efficiently generate valid combinations.Once mastered, this pattern becomes extremely useful in solving many advanced recursion problems.Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)1. Why can’t we add ")" anytime?Because it may create invalid sequences like ")(".2. What is the key trick?Ensure:close > open3. Is recursion the best approach?Yes, it is the most intuitive and efficient method.

MediumLeetCodeJavaRecursion
LeetCode 39: Combination Sum – Java Backtracking Solution with Dry Run & Complexity

LeetCode 39: Combination Sum – Java Backtracking Solution with Dry Run & Complexity

IntroductionIf you are preparing for coding interviews or improving your Data Structures and Algorithms skills, LeetCode 39 Combination Sum is one of the most important backtracking problems to learn. This problem helps you understand how recursion explores multiple possibilities and how combinations are generated efficiently. It is a foundational problem that builds strong problem-solving skills and prepares you for many advanced recursion and backtracking questions.Why Should You Solve This Problem?Combination Sum is not just another coding question — it teaches you how to think recursively and break a complex problem into smaller decisions. By solving it, you learn how to manage recursive paths, avoid duplicate combinations, and build interview-level backtracking intuition. Once you understand this pattern, problems like subsets, permutations, N-Queens, and Sudoku Solver become much easier to approach.LeetCode Problem LinkProblem Name: Combination SumProblem Link: Combination SumProblem StatementGiven an array of distinct integers called candidates and a target integer target, you need to return all unique combinations where the chosen numbers sum to the target.Important rules:You can use the same number unlimited times.Only unique combinations should be returned.Order of combinations does not matter.ExampleExample 1Input:candidates = [2,3,6,7]target = 7Output:[[2,2,3],[7]]Explanation2 + 2 + 3 = 77 itself equals targetUnderstanding the Problem in Simple WordsWe are given some numbers.We need to:Pick numbers from the arrayAdd them togetherReach the target sumUse numbers multiple times if neededAvoid duplicate combinationsThis problem belongs to the Backtracking + Recursion category.Real-Life AnalogyImagine you have coins of different values.You want to make an exact payment.You can reuse coins multiple times.You need to find every possible valid coin combination.This is exactly what Combination Sum does.Intuition Behind the SolutionAt every index, we have two choices:Pick the current numberSkip the current numberSince numbers can be reused unlimited times, when we pick a number, we stay at the same index.This creates a recursion tree.We continue until:Target becomes 0 → valid answerTarget becomes negative → invalid pathArray ends → stop recursionWhy Backtracking Works HereBacktracking helps us:Explore all possible combinationsUndo previous decisionsTry another pathIt is useful whenever we need:All combinationsAll subsetsPath explorationRecursive searchingApproach 1: Backtracking Using Pick and SkipCore IdeaAt every element:Either take itOr move to next elementJava Code (Pick and Skip Method)class Solution {List<List<Integer>> result = new ArrayList<>();public void solve(int[] candidates, int index, int target, List<Integer> current) {if (target == 0) {result.add(new ArrayList<>(current));return;}if (index == candidates.length) {return;}if (candidates[index] <= target) {current.add(candidates[index]);solve(candidates, index, target - candidates[index], current);current.remove(current.size() - 1);}solve(candidates, index + 1, target, current);}public List<List<Integer>> combinationSum(int[] candidates, int target) {solve(candidates, 0, target, new ArrayList<>());return result;}}Approach 2: Backtracking Using Loop (Optimized)This is the cleaner and more optimized version.Your code belongs to this category.Java Code (Loop-Based Backtracking)class Solution {List<List<Integer>> result = new ArrayList<>();public void solve(int[] arr, int index, int target, List<Integer> current) {if (target == 0) {result.add(new ArrayList<>(current));return;}if (index == arr.length) {return;}for (int i = index; i < arr.length; i++) {if (arr[i] > target) {continue;}current.add(arr[i]);solve(arr, i, target - arr[i], current);current.remove(current.size() - 1);}}public List<List<Integer>> combinationSum(int[] candidates, int target) {solve(candidates, 0, target, new ArrayList<>());return result;}}Dry Run of the AlgorithmInputcandidates = [2,3,6,7]target = 7Step-by-Step ExecutionStart:solve([2,3,6,7], index=0, target=7, [])Pick 2[2]target = 5Pick 2 again:[2,2]target = 3Pick 2 again:[2,2,2]target = 1No valid choice possible.Backtrack.Try 3[2,2,3]target = 0Valid answer found.Add:[2,2,3]Try 7[7]target = 0Valid answer found.Add:[7]Final Output[[2,2,3],[7]]Recursion Tree Visualization[]/ | | \2 3 6 7/2/2/3Every branch explores a different combination.Time Complexity AnalysisTime ComplexityO(2^Target)More accurately:O(N^(Target/minValue))Where:N = Number of candidatesTarget = Required sumReason:Every number can be picked multiple times.This creates many recursive branches.Space ComplexityO(Target)Reason:Recursion stack stores elements.Maximum recursion depth depends on target.Why We Pass Same Index AgainNotice this line:solve(arr, i, target - arr[i], current);We pass i, not i+1.Why?Because we can reuse the same number unlimited times.If we used i+1, we would move forward and lose repetition.Why Duplicate Combinations Are Not CreatedWe start loop from current index.This guarantees:[2,3]and[3,2]are not both generated.Order remains controlled.Common Mistakes Beginners Make1. Using i+1 Instead of iWrong:solve(arr, i+1, target-arr[i], current)This prevents reuse.2. Forgetting Backtracking StepWrong:current.remove(current.size()-1)Without removing, recursion keeps incorrect values.3. Missing Target == 0 Base CaseThis is where valid answer is stored.Important Interview InsightCombination Sum is a foundational problem.It helps build understanding for:Combination Sum IISubsetsPermutationsN-QueensWord SearchSudoku SolverThis question is frequently asked in coding interviews.Pattern RecognitionUse Backtracking when problem says:Find all combinationsGenerate all subsetsFind all pathsUse recursionExplore possibilitiesOptimized Thinking StrategyWhenever you see:Target sumRepeated selectionMultiple combinationsThink:Backtracking + DFSEdge CasesCase 1candidates = [2]target = 1Output:[]No possible answer.Case 2candidates = [1]target = 3Output:[[1,1,1]]Interview Answer in One Line“We use backtracking to recursively try all candidate numbers while reducing the target and backtrack whenever a path becomes invalid.”Final Java Codeclass Solution {List<List<Integer>> result = new ArrayList<>();public void solve(int[] arr, int index, int target, List<Integer> current) {if (target == 0) {result.add(new ArrayList<>(current));return;}for (int i = index; i < arr.length; i++) {if (arr[i] > target) {continue;}current.add(arr[i]);solve(arr, i, target - arr[i], current);current.remove(current.size() - 1);}}public List<List<Integer>> combinationSum(int[] candidates, int target) {solve(candidates, 0, target, new ArrayList<>());return result;}}Key TakeawaysCombination Sum uses Backtracking.Reuse same element by passing same index.Target becomes smaller in recursion.Backtracking removes last element.Very important for interview preparation.Frequently Asked QuestionsIs Combination Sum DP or Backtracking?It is primarily solved using Backtracking.Dynamic Programming can also solve it but recursion is more common.Why is this Medium difficulty?Because:Requires recursion understandingRequires backtracking logicRequires duplicate preventionCan we sort the array?Yes.Sorting can help with pruning.ConclusionLeetCode 39 Combination Sum is one of the best problems to learn recursion and backtracking.Once you understand this pattern, many interview problems become easier.The loop-based recursive solution is clean, optimized, and interview-friendly.If you master this question, you gain strong understanding of recursive decision trees and combination generation.

LeetcodeMediumRecursionBacktrackingJava
Fruit Into Baskets – Sliding Window with Two Types

Fruit Into Baskets – Sliding Window with Two Types

IntroductionLeetCode 904: Fruit Into Baskets is a classic sliding window problem that tests your ability to track a limited number of distinct elements in a subarray.The problem can be rephrased as:Find the longest subarray containing at most 2 distinct types of elements.This is a great example of using HashMap + sliding window to efficiently track counts of elements while expanding and shrinking the window.If you’d like to try solving the problem first, you can attempt it here:Try the problem on LeetCode:https://leetcode.com/problems/fruit-into-baskets/Problem UnderstandingYou are given:An array fruits where fruits[i] represents the type of fruit from tree iTwo baskets, each can hold only one type of fruitRules:Start at any tree and move only to the rightPick exactly one fruit from each tree while movingStop when a tree’s fruit cannot fit in your basketsGoal: Return the maximum number of fruits you can pick.Examples:Input: fruits = [1,2,1]Output: 3Explanation: Pick all fruits [1,2,1].Input: fruits = [0,1,2,2]Output: 3Explanation: Best subarray [1,2,2].Input: fruits = [1,2,3,2,2]Output: 4Explanation: Best subarray [2,3,2,2].A naive approach would check all subarrays, count distinct fruits, and pick the max →Time Complexity: O(n²) → too slow for fruits.length up to 10⁵Key Idea: Sliding Window with At Most Two TypesInstead of brute-force:Track the number of each fruit type in the current window using a HashMapUse two pointers i and j for the windowExpand j by adding fruits[j] to the mapIf the number of distinct types mp.size() exceeds 2:Shrink the window from the left (i) until mp.size() <= 2The window length j - i + 1 gives the max fruits collected so farIntuition:Only two baskets → window can contain at most 2 distinct fruitsThe sliding window efficiently finds the longest subarray with ≤ 2 distinct elementsApproach (Step-by-Step)Initialize i = 0, j = 0 for window pointersInitialize HashMap mp to store fruit countsInitialize co = 0 → maximum fruits collectedIterate j over fruits:Add fruits[j] to the mapCheck mp.size():If ≤ 2 → update co = max(co, j - i + 1)If > 2 → shrink window from i until mp.size() <= 2Continue expanding the windowReturn co as the maximum fruits collectedOptimization:HashMap keeps track of counts → no need to scan subarray repeatedlySliding window ensures linear traversalImplementation (Java)class Solution {public int totalFruit(int[] nums) {HashMap<Integer,Integer> mp = new HashMap<>();int i = 0, j = 0; // window pointersint co = 0; // max fruits collectedwhile (j < nums.length) {// Add current fruit to mapmp.put(nums[j], mp.getOrDefault(nums[j], 0) + 1);if (mp.size() <= 2) {co = Math.max(co, j - i + 1); // valid windowj++;} else {// Shrink window until at most 2 types of fruitswhile (mp.size() > 2) {mp.put(nums[i], mp.get(nums[i]) - 1);if (mp.get(nums[i]) == 0) {mp.remove(nums[i]);}i++;}co = Math.max(co, j - i + 1);j++;}}return co;}}Dry Run ExampleInput:fruits = [1,2,3,2,2]Execution:Window [i, j]Fruit counts mpDistinct TypesValid?Max co[0,0] → [1]{1:1}1Yes1[0,1] → [1,2]{1:1,2:1}2Yes2[0,2] → [1,2,3]{1:1,2:1,3:1}3No → shrink2[1,2] → [2,3]{2:1,3:1}2Yes2[1,3] → [2,3,2]{2:2,3:1}2Yes3[1,4] → [2,3,2,2]{2:3,3:1}2Yes4Output:4Complexity AnalysisTime Complexity: O(n) → Each element is added and removed at most onceSpace Complexity: O(1) → HashMap stores at most 2 types of fruitsEdge Cases ConsideredArray with ≤ 2 types → entire array can be pickedArray with all same type → window length = array lengthZeros or non-continuous fruit types → handled by sliding windowLarge arrays up to 10⁵ elements → O(n) solution works efficientlySliding Window Pattern ImportanceThis problem demonstrates the sliding window + frequency map pattern:Track limited number of distinct elementsExpand/shrink window dynamicallyEfficiently compute max subarray length with constraintsIt’s directly related to problems like:Max consecutive ones with flipsLongest substring with k distinct charactersFruit collection / subarray problems with type limitsConclusionBy tracking fruit counts with a HashMap in a sliding window, we efficiently find the maximum fruits collectible in O(n) time.Mastering this pattern allows solving many array and string problems with constraints on distinct elements in a linear and elegant way.

SlidingWindowHashMapLeetCodeMedium
What Is Dynamic Programming? Origin Story, Real-Life Uses, LeetCode Problems & Complete Beginner Guide

What Is Dynamic Programming? Origin Story, Real-Life Uses, LeetCode Problems & Complete Beginner Guide

Introduction — Why Dynamic Programming Feels Hard (And Why It Isn't)If you've ever stared at a LeetCode problem, read the solution, understood every single line, and still had absolutely no idea how someone arrived at it — welcome. You've just experienced the classic Dynamic Programming (DP) confusion.DP has a reputation. People treat it like some dark art reserved for competitive programmers or Google engineers. The truth? Dynamic Programming is one of the most logical, learnable, and satisfying techniques in all of computer science. Once it clicks, it really clicks.This guide will take you from zero to genuinely confident. We'll cover where DP came from, how it works, what patterns to learn, how to recognize DP problems, real-world places it shows up, LeetCode problems to practice, time complexity analysis, and the mistakes that trip up even experienced developers.Let's go.The Origin Story — Who Invented Dynamic Programming and Why?The term "Dynamic Programming" was coined by Richard Bellman in the early 1950s while working at RAND Corporation. Here's the funny part: the name was deliberately chosen to sound impressive and vague.Bellman was doing mathematical research that his employer — the US Secretary of Defense, Charles Wilson — would have found difficult to fund if described accurately. Wilson had a well-known distaste for the word "research." So Bellman invented a name that sounded suitably grand and mathematical: Dynamic Programming.In his autobiography, Bellman wrote that he picked the word "dynamic" because it had a precise technical meaning and was also impossible to use negatively. "Programming" referred to the mathematical sense — planning and decision-making — not computer programming.The underlying idea? Break a complex problem into overlapping subproblems, solve each subproblem once, and store the result so you never solve it twice.Bellman's foundational contribution was the Bellman Equation, which underpins not just algorithms but also economics, operations research, and modern reinforcement learning.So the next time DP feels frustrating, remember — even its inventor named it specifically to confuse people. You're in good company.What Is Dynamic Programming? (Simple Definition)Dynamic Programming is an algorithmic technique used to solve problems by:Breaking them down into smaller overlapping subproblemsSolving each subproblem only onceStoring the result (memoization or tabulation)Building up the final solution from those stored resultsThe key insight is overlapping subproblems + optimal substructure.Overlapping subproblems means the same smaller problems come up again and again. Instead of solving them every time (like plain recursion does), DP solves them once and caches the answer.Optimal substructure means the optimal solution to the whole problem can be built from optimal solutions to its subproblems.If a problem has both these properties — it's a DP problem.The Two Approaches to Dynamic Programming1. Top-Down with Memoization (Recursive + Cache)You write a recursive solution exactly as you would naturally, but add a cache (usually a dictionary or array) to store results you've already computed.fib(n):if n in cache: return cache[n]if n <= 1: return ncache[n] = fib(n-1) + fib(n-2)return cache[n]This is called memoization — remember what you computed so you don't repeat yourself.Pros: Natural to write, mirrors the recursive thinking, easy to reason about. Cons: Stack overhead from recursion, risk of stack overflow on large inputs.2. Bottom-Up with Tabulation (Iterative)You figure out the order in which subproblems need to be solved, then solve them iteratively from the smallest up, filling a table.fib(n):dp = [0, 1]for i from 2 to n:dp[i] = dp[i-1] + dp[i-2]return dp[n]This is called tabulation — fill a table, cell by cell, bottom to top.Pros: No recursion overhead, usually faster in practice, easier to optimize space. Cons: Requires thinking about the order of computation upfront.🧩 Dynamic Programming Template CodeBefore diving into how to recognize DP problems, here are ready-to-use Java templates for every major DP pattern. Think of these as your reusable blueprints — every DP problem you ever solve will fit into one of these structures. Just define your state, plug in your recurrence relation, and you are good to go.Template 1 — Top-Down (Memoization)import java.util.HashMap;import java.util.Map;public class TopDownDP {Map<Integer, Integer> memo = new HashMap<>();public int solve(int n) {// Base caseif (n <= 1) return n;// Check cacheif (memo.containsKey(n)) return memo.get(n);// Recurrence relation — change this part for your problemint result = solve(n - 1) + solve(n - 2);// Store in cachememo.put(n, result);return result;}}Template 2 — Bottom-Up (Tabulation)public class BottomUpDP {public int solve(int n) {// Create DP tableint[] dp = new int[n + 1];// Base casesdp[0] = 0;dp[1] = 1;// Fill the table bottom-upfor (int i = 2; i <= n; i++) {// Recurrence relation — change this part for your problemdp[i] = dp[i - 1] + dp[i - 2];}return dp[n];}}Template 3 — Bottom-Up with Space Optimizationpublic class SpaceOptimizedDP {public int solve(int n) {// Only keep last two values instead of full tableint prev2 = 0;int prev1 = 1;for (int i = 2; i <= n; i++) {// Recurrence relation — change this part for your problemint curr = prev1 + prev2;prev2 = prev1;prev1 = curr;}return prev1;}}Template 4 — 2D DP (Two Sequences or Grid)public class TwoDimensionalDP {public int solve(String s1, String s2) {int m = s1.length();int n = s2.length();// Create 2D DP tableint[][] dp = new int[m + 1][n + 1];// Base cases — first row and columnfor (int i = 0; i <= m; i++) dp[i][0] = i;for (int j = 0; j <= n; j++) dp[0][j] = j;// Fill table cell by cellfor (int i = 1; i <= m; i++) {for (int j = 1; j <= n; j++) {// Recurrence relation — change this part for your problemif (s1.charAt(i - 1) == s2.charAt(j - 1)) {dp[i][j] = dp[i - 1][j - 1];} else {dp[i][j] = 1 + Math.min(dp[i - 1][j],Math.min(dp[i][j - 1], dp[i - 1][j - 1]));}}}return dp[m][n];}}Template 5 — Knapsack Patternpublic class KnapsackDP {public int solve(int[] weights, int[] values, int capacity) {int n = weights.length;// dp[i][w] = max value using first i items with capacity wint[][] dp = new int[n + 1][capacity + 1];for (int i = 1; i <= n; i++) {for (int w = 0; w <= capacity; w++) {// Don't take item idp[i][w] = dp[i - 1][w];// Take item i if it fitsif (weights[i - 1] <= w) {dp[i][w] = Math.max(dp[i][w],values[i - 1] + dp[i - 1][w - weights[i - 1]]);}}}return dp[n][capacity];}}💡 How to use these templates:Step 1 — Identify which pattern your problem fits into. Step 2 — Define what dp[i] or dp[i][j] means in plain English before writing any code. Step 3 — Write your recurrence relation on paper first. Step 4 — Plug it into the matching template above. Step 5 — Handle your specific base cases carefully.🎥 Visual Learning Resource — Watch This Before Moving ForwardIf you prefer learning by watching before reading, this free full-length course by freeCodeCamp is one of the best Dynamic Programming resources on the internet. Watch it alongside this guide for maximum understanding.Credit: freeCodeCamp — a free, nonprofit coding education platform.How to Recognize a Dynamic Programming ProblemAsk yourself these four questions:1. Can I define the problem in terms of smaller versions of itself? If you can write a recursive formula (recurrence relation), DP might apply.2. Do the subproblems overlap? If a naive recursive solution would recompute the same thing many times, DP is the right tool.3. Is there an optimal substructure? Is the best answer to the big problem made up of best answers to smaller problems?4. Are you looking for a count, minimum, maximum, or yes/no answer? DP problems often ask: "What is the minimum cost?", "How many ways?", "Can we achieve X?"Red flag words in problem statements: minimum, maximum, shortest, longest, count the number of ways, can we reach, is it possible, fewest steps.The Core DP Patterns You Must LearnMastering DP is really about recognizing patterns. Here are the most important ones:Pattern 1 — 1D DP (Linear) Problems where the state depends on previous elements in a single sequence. Examples: Fibonacci, Climbing Stairs, House Robber.Pattern 2 — 2D DP (Grid / Two-sequence) Problems with two dimensions of state, often grids or two strings. Examples: Longest Common Subsequence, Edit Distance, Unique Paths.Pattern 3 — Interval DP You consider all possible intervals or subarrays and build solutions from them. Examples: Matrix Chain Multiplication, Burst Balloons, Palindrome Partitioning.Pattern 4 — Knapsack DP (0/1 and Unbounded) You decide whether to include or exclude items under a capacity constraint. Examples: 0/1 Knapsack, Coin Change, Partition Equal Subset Sum.Pattern 5 — DP on Trees State is defined per node; you combine results from children. Examples: Diameter of Binary Tree, House Robber III, Maximum Path Sum.Pattern 6 — DP on Subsets / Bitmask DP State includes a bitmask representing which elements have been chosen. Examples: Travelling Salesman Problem, Shortest Superstring.Pattern 7 — DP on Strings Matching, editing, or counting arrangements within strings. Examples: Longest Palindromic Subsequence, Regular Expression Matching, Wildcard Matching.Top LeetCode Problems to Practice Dynamic Programming (With Links)Here are the essential problems, organized by difficulty and pattern. Solve them in this order.Beginner — Warm UpProblemPatternLinkClimbing Stairs1D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/climbing-stairs/Fibonacci Number1D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/fibonacci-number/House Robber1D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/house-robber/Min Cost Climbing Stairs1D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/min-cost-climbing-stairs/Best Time to Buy and Sell Stock1D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/best-time-to-buy-and-sell-stock/Intermediate — Core PatternsProblemPatternLinkCoin ChangeKnapsackhttps://leetcode.com/problems/coin-change/Longest Increasing Subsequence1D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/longest-increasing-subsequence/Longest Common Subsequence2D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/longest-common-subsequence/0/1 Knapsack (via Subset Sum)Knapsackhttps://leetcode.com/problems/partition-equal-subset-sum/Unique Paths2D Grid DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/unique-paths/Jump Game1D DP / Greedyhttps://leetcode.com/problems/jump-game/Word BreakString DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/word-break/Decode Ways1D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/decode-ways/Edit Distance2D String DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/edit-distance/Triangle2D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/triangle/Advanced — Interview LevelProblemPatternLinkBurst BalloonsInterval DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/burst-balloons/Regular Expression MatchingString DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/regular-expression-matching/Wildcard MatchingString DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/wildcard-matching/Palindrome Partitioning IIInterval DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/palindrome-partitioning-ii/Maximum Profit in Job SchedulingDP + Binary Searchhttps://leetcode.com/problems/maximum-profit-in-job-scheduling/Distinct Subsequences2D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/distinct-subsequences/Cherry Pickup3D DPhttps://leetcode.com/problems/cherry-pickup/Real-World Use Cases of Dynamic ProgrammingDP is not just for coding interviews. It is deeply embedded in the technology you use every day.1. Google Maps & Navigation (Shortest Path) The routing engines behind GPS apps use DP-based algorithms like Dijkstra and Bellman-Ford to find the shortest or fastest path between two points across millions of nodes.2. Spell Checkers & Autocorrect (Edit Distance) When your phone corrects "teh" to "the," it is computing Edit Distance — a classic DP problem — between what you typed and every word in the dictionary.3. DNA Sequence Alignment (Bioinformatics) Researchers use the Needleman-Wunsch and Smith-Waterman algorithms — both DP — to align DNA and protein sequences and find similarities between species or identify mutations.4. Video Compression (MPEG, H.264) Modern video codecs use DP to determine the most efficient way to encode video frames, deciding which frames to store as full images and which to store as differences from the previous frame.5. Financial Portfolio Optimization Investment algorithms use DP to find the optimal allocation of assets under risk constraints — essentially a variant of the knapsack problem.6. Natural Language Processing (NLP) The Viterbi algorithm — used in speech recognition, part-of-speech tagging, and machine translation — is a DP algorithm. Every time Siri or Google Assistant understands your sentence, DP played a role.7. Game AI (Chess, Checkers) Game trees and minimax algorithms with memoization use DP to evaluate board positions and find the best move without recomputing already-seen positions.8. Compiler Optimization Compilers use DP to decide the optimal order of operations and instruction scheduling to generate the most efficient machine code.9. Text Justification (Word Processors) Microsoft Word and LaTeX use DP to optimally break paragraphs into lines — minimizing raggedness and maximizing visual appeal.10. Resource Scheduling in Cloud Computing AWS, Google Cloud, and Azure use DP-based scheduling to assign computational tasks to servers in the most cost-efficient way possible.Time Complexity Analysis of Common DP ProblemsUnderstanding the time complexity of DP is critical for interviews and for building scalable systems.ProblemTime ComplexitySpace ComplexityNotesFibonacci (naive recursion)O(2ⁿ)O(n)Exponential — terribleFibonacci (DP)O(n)O(1) with optimizationLinear — excellentLongest Common SubsequenceO(m × n)O(m × n)m, n = lengths of two stringsEdit DistanceO(m × n)O(m × n)Can optimize space to O(n)0/1 KnapsackO(n × W)O(n × W)n = items, W = capacityCoin ChangeO(n × amount)O(amount)Classic tabulationLongest Increasing SubsequenceO(n²) or O(n log n)O(n)Binary search version is fasterMatrix Chain MultiplicationO(n³)O(n²)Interval DPTravelling Salesman (bitmask)O(2ⁿ × n²)O(2ⁿ × n)Still exponential but manageable for small nThe general rule: DP trades time for space. You use memory to avoid recomputation. The time complexity equals the number of unique states multiplied by the work done per state.How to Learn and Master Dynamic Programming — Step by StepHere is an honest, structured path to mastery:Step 1 — Get recursion absolutely solid first. DP is memoized recursion at its core. If you cannot write clean recursive solutions confidently, DP will remain confusing. Practice at least 20 pure recursion problems first.Step 2 — Start with the classics. Fibonacci → Climbing Stairs → House Robber → Coin Change. These teach you the core pattern of defining state and transition without overwhelming you.Step 3 — Learn to define state explicitly. Before writing any code, ask: "What does dp[i] represent?" Write it in plain English. "dp[i] = the minimum cost to reach step i." This single habit separates good DP thinkers from struggling ones.Step 4 — Write the recurrence relation before coding. On paper or in a comment. Example: dp[i] = min(dp[i-1] + cost[i-1], dp[i-2] + cost[i-2]). If you can write the recurrence, the code writes itself.Step 5 — Master one pattern at a time. Don't jump between knapsack and interval DP in the same week. Spend a few days on each pattern until it feels intuitive.Step 6 — Solve the same problem both ways. Top-down and bottom-up. This builds deep understanding of what DP is actually doing.Step 7 — Optimize space after getting correctness. Many 2D DP solutions can use a single row instead of a full matrix. Learn this optimization after you understand the full solution.Step 8 — Do timed practice under interview conditions. Give yourself 35 minutes per problem. Review what you got wrong. DP is a muscle — it builds with reps.Common Mistakes in Dynamic Programming (And How to Avoid Them)Mistake 1 — Jumping to code before defining state. The most common DP error. Always define what dp[i] or dp[i][j] means before writing a single line of code.Mistake 2 — Wrong base cases. A single wrong base case corrupts every answer built on top of it. Trace through your base cases manually on a tiny example before running code.Mistake 3 — Off-by-one errors in indexing. Whether your dp array is 0-indexed or 1-indexed must be 100% consistent throughout. This causes more bugs in DP than almost anything else.Mistake 4 — Confusing top-down with bottom-up state order. In bottom-up DP, you must ensure that when you compute dp[i], all values it depends on are already filled. If you compute in the wrong order, you get garbage answers.Mistake 5 — Memoizing in the wrong dimension. In 2D problems, some people cache only one dimension when the state actually requires two. Always identify all variables that affect the outcome.Mistake 6 — Using global mutable state in recursion. If you use a shared array and don't clear it between test cases, you'll get wrong answers on subsequent inputs. Always scope your cache correctly.Mistake 7 — Not considering the full state space. In problems like Knapsack, forgetting that the state is (item index, remaining capacity) — not just item index — leads to fundamentally wrong solutions.Mistake 8 — Giving up after not recognizing the pattern immediately. DP problems don't announce themselves. The skill is learning to ask "is there overlapping subproblems here?" on every problem. This takes time. Don't mistake unfamiliarity for inability.Frequently Asked Questions About Dynamic ProgrammingQ: Is Dynamic Programming the same as recursion? Not exactly. Recursion is a technique for breaking problems into smaller pieces. DP is recursion plus memoization — or iterative tabulation. All DP can be written recursively, but not all recursion is DP.Q: What is the difference between DP and Divide and Conquer? Divide and Conquer (like Merge Sort) breaks problems into non-overlapping subproblems. DP is used when subproblems overlap — meaning the same subproblem is solved multiple times in a naive approach.Q: How do I know when NOT to use DP? If the subproblems don't overlap (no repeated computation), greedy or divide-and-conquer may be better. If the problem has no optimal substructure, DP won't give a correct answer.Q: Do I need to memorize DP solutions for interviews? No. You need to recognize patterns and be able to derive the recurrence relation. Memorizing solutions without understanding them will fail you in interviews. Focus on the thinking process.Q: How long does it take to get good at DP? Most people start to feel genuinely comfortable after solving 40–60 varied DP problems with deliberate practice. The first 10 feel impossible. The next 20 feel hard. After 50, patterns start feeling obvious.Q: What programming language is best for DP? Any language works. Python is often used for learning because its dictionaries make memoization trivial. C++ is preferred in competitive programming for its speed. For interviews, use whatever language you're most comfortable in.Q: What is space optimization in DP? Many DP problems only look back one or two rows to compute the current row. In those cases, you can replace an n×m table with just two arrays (or even one), reducing space complexity from O(n×m) to O(m). This is called space optimization or rolling array technique.Q: Can DP be applied to graph problems? Absolutely. Shortest path algorithms like Bellman-Ford are DP. Longest path in a DAG is DP. DP on trees is a rich subfield. Anywhere you have states and transitions, DP can potentially apply.Q: Is Greedy a type of Dynamic Programming? Greedy is related but distinct. Greedy makes locally optimal choices without reconsidering. DP considers all choices and picks the globally optimal one. Some DP solutions reduce to greedy when the structure allows, but they are different techniques.Q: What resources should I use to learn DP? For structured learning: Neetcode.io (organized problem list), Striver's DP Series on YouTube, and the book "Introduction to Algorithms" (CLRS) for theoretical depth. For practice: LeetCode's Dynamic Programming study plan and Codeforces for competitive DP.Final Thoughts — Dynamic Programming Is a SuperpowerDynamic Programming is genuinely one of the most powerful ideas in computer science. It shows up in your GPS, your autocorrect, your streaming video, your bank's risk models, and the AI assistants you talk to daily.The path to mastering it is not memorization. It is developing the habit of asking: can I break this into smaller problems that overlap? And then learning to define state clearly, write the recurrence, and trust the process.Start with Climbing Stairs. Write dp[i] in plain English before every problem. Solve everything twice — top-down and bottom-up. Do 50 problems with genuine reflection, not just accepted solutions.The click moment will come. And when it does, you'll wonder why it ever felt hard.

Dynamic ProgrammingMemoizationTabulationJavaOrigin StoryRichard Bellman
Subsets Problem (LeetCode 78) Explained | Recursion, Iterative & Bit Manipulation

Subsets Problem (LeetCode 78) Explained | Recursion, Iterative & Bit Manipulation

IntroductionThe Subsets problem (LeetCode 78) is one of the most fundamental and frequently asked questions in coding interviews. It introduces the concept of generating a power set, which is a core idea in recursion, backtracking, and combinatorics.Mastering this problem helps in solving a wide range of advanced problems like combinations, permutations, and decision-based recursion.In this article, we will explore:Intuition behind subsetsRecursive (backtracking) approachIterative (loop-based) approachBit manipulation approachTime and space complexity analysisProblem StatementGiven an integer array nums of unique elements, return all possible subsets (the power set).Key PointsEach element can either be included or excludedNo duplicate subsetsReturn subsets in any orderExamplesExample 1Input:nums = [1, 2, 3]Output:[[], [1], [2], [1,2], [3], [1,3], [2,3], [1,2,3]]Example 2Input:nums = [0]Output:[[], [0]]Key InsightFor each element, there are two choices:Include it OR Exclude itSo total subsets:2^nThis makes it a binary decision tree problem, very similar to:Permutation with SpacesBinary choices recursionBacktracking problemsApproach 1: Recursion + Backtracking (Most Important)IntuitionAt each index:Skip the elementInclude the elementBuild subsets step by step and backtrack.Java Code (With Explanation)import java.util.*;class Solution { List<List<Integer>> liss = new ArrayList<>(); void solve(int[] an, int ind, List<Integer> lis) { // Base case: reached end → one subset formed if (ind == an.length) { liss.add(new ArrayList<>(lis)); // store copy return; } // Choice 1: Do NOT include current element solve(an, ind + 1, lis); // Choice 2: Include current element lis.add(an[ind]); solve(an, ind + 1, lis); // Backtrack: remove last added element lis.remove(lis.size() - 1); } public List<List<Integer>> subsets(int[] nums) { List<Integer> lis = new ArrayList<>(); solve(nums, 0, lis); return liss; }}Dry Run (nums = [1,2])Start: [] → skip 1 → [] → skip 2 → [] → take 2 → [2] → take 1 → [1] → skip 2 → [1] → take 2 → [1,2]Final Output:[], [2], [1], [1,2]Approach 2: Iterative (Loop-Based)IntuitionStart with an empty subset:[ [] ]For each element:Add it to all existing subsetsCodeimport java.util.*;class Solution { public List<List<Integer>> subsets(int[] nums) { List<List<Integer>> result = new ArrayList<>(); result.add(new ArrayList<>()); for (int num : nums) { int size = result.size(); for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) { List<Integer> temp = new ArrayList<>(result.get(i)); temp.add(num); result.add(temp); } } return result; }}How It WorksFor [1,2,3]:Start: [[]]Add 1 → [[], [1]]Add 2 → [[], [1], [2], [1,2]]Add 3 → [[], [1], [2], [1,2], [3], [1,3], [2,3], [1,2,3]]Approach 3: Bit ManipulationIntuitionEach subset can be represented using a binary number:For n = 3:000 → []001 → [1]010 → [2]011 → [1,2]...Codeimport java.util.*;class Solution { public List<List<Integer>> subsets(int[] nums) { List<List<Integer>> result = new ArrayList<>(); int n = nums.length; int total = 1 << n; // 2^n for (int i = 0; i < total; i++) { List<Integer> subset = new ArrayList<>(); for (int j = 0; j < n; j++) { if ((i & (1 << j)) != 0) { subset.add(nums[j]); } } result.add(subset); } return result; }}Complexity AnalysisApproachTime ComplexitySpace ComplexityRecursionO(2^n)O(n) stackIterativeO(2^n)O(2^n)Bit ManipulationO(2^n)O(2^n)Why All Approaches Are O(2ⁿ)Because:Total subsets = 2ⁿEach subset takes up to O(n) to constructWhen to Use Which ApproachRecursion / Backtracking → Best for interviews (easy to explain)Iterative → Clean and beginner-friendlyBit Manipulation → Best for optimization & advanced understandingKey TakeawaysSubsets = power set problemEvery element → 2 choicesThink in terms of decision treesBacktracking = build + undo (add/remove)Common Interview VariationsSubsets with duplicatesCombination sumPermutationsK-sized subsetsConclusionThe Subsets problem is a foundational DSA concept that appears across many interview questions. Understanding all approaches—especially recursion and iterative expansion—gives a strong base for solving complex backtracking problems.If you master this pattern, you unlock a whole category of problems in recursion and combinatorics.Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)1. Why are there 2ⁿ subsets?Because each element has 2 choices: include or exclude.2. Which approach is best for interviews?Recursion + backtracking is the most preferred.3. Is bit manipulation important?Yes, it helps in optimizing and understanding binary patterns.

LeetCodeMediumJavaRecursionBacktracking
All Subsequences of a String (Power Set) | Recursion & Backtracking Java Solution

All Subsequences of a String (Power Set) | Recursion & Backtracking Java Solution

IntroductionThe Power Set problem for strings is a classic question in recursion and backtracking, frequently asked in coding interviews and platforms like GeeksforGeeks.In this problem, instead of numbers, we deal with strings and generate all possible subsequences (not substrings). This makes it slightly more interesting and practical for real-world applications like pattern matching, text processing, and combinatorics.In this article, we will cover:Intuition behind subsequencesRecursive (backtracking) approachSorting for lexicographical orderAlternative approachesComplexity analysisProblem StatementGiven a string s of length n, generate all non-empty subsequences of the string.RequirementsReturn only non-empty subsequencesOutput must be in lexicographically sorted orderExamplesExample 1Input:s = "abc"Output:a ab abc ac b bc cExample 2Input:s = "aa"Output:a a aaSubsequence vs Substring (Important)Substring: Continuous charactersSubsequence: Characters can be skippedExample for "abc":Subsequences → a, b, c, ab, ac, bc, abcKey InsightFor every character, we have two choices:Include it OR Exclude itSo total subsequences:2^nWe generate all and then remove the empty string.Approach 1: Recursion (Backtracking)IntuitionAt each index:Skip the characterInclude the characterBuild all combinations recursivelyJava Code (With Explanation)import java.util.*;class Solution { // List to store all subsequences List<String> a = new ArrayList<>(); void sub(String s, int ind, String curr) { // Base case: reached end of string if (ind == s.length()) { a.add(curr); // add current subsequence return; } // Choice 1: Exclude current character sub(s, ind + 1, curr); // Choice 2: Include current character sub(s, ind + 1, curr + s.charAt(ind)); } public List<String> AllPossibleStrings(String s) { // Start recursion sub(s, 0, ""); // Remove empty string (not allowed) a.remove(""); // Sort lexicographically Collections.sort(a); return a; }}Step-by-Step Dry Run (s = "abc")Start: ""→ Exclude 'a' → "" → Exclude 'b' → "" → Exclude 'c' → "" → Include 'c' → "c" → Include 'b' → "b" → Exclude 'c' → "b" → Include 'c' → "bc"→ Include 'a' → "a" → Exclude 'b' → "a" → Exclude 'c' → "a" → Include 'c' → "ac" → Include 'b' → "ab" → Exclude 'c' → "ab" → Include 'c' → "abc"Final Output (After Sorting)a ab abc ac b bc cApproach 2: Bit ManipulationIntuitionEach subsequence can be represented using binary numbers:0 → exclude1 → includeCodeimport java.util.*;class Solution { public List<String> AllPossibleStrings(String s) { List<String> result = new ArrayList<>(); int n = s.length(); int total = 1 << n; // 2^n for (int i = 1; i < total; i++) { // start from 1 to avoid empty StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(); for (int j = 0; j < n; j++) { if ((i & (1 << j)) != 0) { sb.append(s.charAt(j)); } } result.add(sb.toString()); } Collections.sort(result); return result; }}Approach 3: Iterative (Expanding List)IdeaStart with empty listFor each character:Add it to all existing subsequencesCodeimport java.util.*;class Solution { public List<String> AllPossibleStrings(String s) { List<String> result = new ArrayList<>(); result.add(""); for (char ch : s.toCharArray()) { int size = result.size(); for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) { result.add(result.get(i) + ch); } } result.remove(""); Collections.sort(result); return result; }}Complexity AnalysisTime Complexity: O(n × 2ⁿ)Space Complexity: O(n × 2ⁿ)Why?Total subsequences = 2ⁿEach subsequence takes O(n) to buildWhy Sorting is RequiredThe recursion generates subsequences in random order, so we sort them:Collections.sort(result);This ensures lexicographical order as required.Key TakeawaysThis is a power set problem for stringsEach character → 2 choicesRecursion = most intuitive approachBit manipulation = most optimized thinkingAlways remove empty string if requiredCommon Interview VariationsSubsets of arrayPermutations of stringCombination sumSubsequence with conditionsConclusionThe Power Set problem is a fundamental building block in recursion and combinatorics. Once you understand the include/exclude pattern, you can solve a wide range of problems efficiently.Mastering this will significantly improve your ability to tackle backtracking and decision tree problems.Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)1. Why is the empty string removed?Because the problem requires only non-empty subsequences.2. Why is time complexity O(n × 2ⁿ)?Because there are 2ⁿ subsequences and each takes O(n) time to construct.3. Which approach is best?Recursion → best for understandingBit manipulation → best for optimization

GeeksforGeeksRecursionJavaBacktrackingMedium
Stack Data Structure in Java: The Complete In-Depth Guide

Stack Data Structure in Java: The Complete In-Depth Guide

1. What Is a Stack?A Stack is a linear data structure that stores elements in a sequential order, but with one strict rule — you can only insert or remove elements from one end, called the top.It is one of the simplest yet most powerful data structures in computer science. Its strength comes from its constraint. Because everything happens at one end, the behavior of a stack is completely predictable.The formal definition: A Stack is a linear data structure that follows the Last In, First Out (LIFO) principle — the element inserted last is the first one to be removed.Here is what a stack looks like visually: ┌──────────┐ │ 50 │ ← TOP (last inserted, first removed) ├──────────┤ │ 40 │ ├──────────┤ │ 30 │ ├──────────┤ │ 20 │ ├──────────┤ │ 10 │ ← BOTTOM (first inserted, last removed) └──────────┘When you push 60 onto this stack, it goes on top. When you pop, 60 comes out first. That is LIFO.2. Real-World AnalogiesBefore writing a single line of code, it helps to see stacks in the real world. These analogies will make the concept permanently stick.A Pile of Plates In a cafeteria, clean plates are stacked on top of each other. You always pick the top plate. You always place a new plate on top. You never reach into the middle. This is a stack.Browser Back Button Every time you visit a new webpage, it gets pushed onto a history stack. When you press the Back button, the browser pops the most recent page off the stack and takes you there. The page you visited first is at the bottom — you only reach it after going back through everything else.Undo Feature in Text Editors When you type in a document and press Ctrl+Z, the most recent action is undone first. That is because every action you perform is pushed onto a stack. Undo simply pops from that stack.Call Stack in Programming When a function calls another function, the current function's state is pushed onto the call stack. When the inner function finishes, it is popped off and execution returns to the outer function. This is the literal stack your programs run on.A Stack of Books Put five books on a table, one on top of another. You can only take the top book without knocking the pile over. That is a stack.3. The LIFO Principle ExplainedLIFO stands for Last In, First Out.It means whatever you put in last is the first thing to come out. This is the exact opposite of a Queue (which is FIFO — First In, First Out).Let us trace through an example step by step:Start: Stack is empty → []Push 10 → [10] (10 is at the top)Push 20 → [10, 20] (20 is at the top)Push 30 → [10, 20, 30] (30 is at the top)Pop → returns 30 (30 was last in, first out) Stack: [10, 20]Pop → returns 20 Stack: [10]Peek → returns 10 (just looks, does not remove) Stack: [10]Pop → returns 10 Stack: [] (stack is now empty)Every single operation happens only at the top. The bottom of the stack is never directly accessible.4. Stack Operations & Time ComplexityA stack supports the following core operations:OperationDescriptionTime Complexitypush(x)Insert element x onto the top of the stackO(1)pop()Remove and return the top elementO(1)peek() / top()Return the top element without removing itO(1)isEmpty()Check if the stack has no elementsO(1)isFull()Check if the stack has reached its capacity (Array only)O(1)size()Return the number of elements in the stackO(1)search(x)Find position of element from top (Java built-in only)O(n)All primary stack operations — push, pop, peek, isEmpty — run in O(1) constant time. This is what makes the stack so efficient. It does not matter whether the stack has 10 elements or 10 million — these operations are always instant.Space complexity for a stack holding n elements is O(n).5. Implementation 1 — Using a Static ArrayThis is the most fundamental way to implement a stack. We use a fixed-size array and a variable called top to track where the top of the stack currently is.How it works:top starts at -1 (stack is empty)On push: increment top, then place the element at arr[top]On pop: return arr[top], then decrement topOn peek: return arr[top] without changing it// StackUsingArray.javapublic class StackUsingArray { private int[] arr; private int top; private int capacity; // Constructor — initialize with a fixed capacity public StackUsingArray(int capacity) { this.capacity = capacity; arr = new int[capacity]; top = -1; } // Push: add element to the top public void push(int value) { if (isFull()) { System.out.println("Stack Overflow! Cannot push " + value); return; } arr[++top] = value; System.out.println("Pushed: " + value); } // Pop: remove and return top element public int pop() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack Underflow! Stack is empty."); return -1; } return arr[top--]; } // Peek: view the top element without removing public int peek() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack is empty."); return -1; } return arr[top]; } // Check if stack is empty public boolean isEmpty() { return top == -1; } // Check if stack is full public boolean isFull() { return top == capacity - 1; } // Return current size public int size() { return top + 1; } // Display all elements public void display() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack is empty."); return; } System.out.print("Stack (top → bottom): "); for (int i = top; i >= 0; i--) { System.out.print(arr[i] + " "); } System.out.println(); } // Main method to test public static void main(String[] args) { StackUsingArray stack = new StackUsingArray(5); stack.push(10); stack.push(20); stack.push(30); stack.push(40); stack.push(50); stack.push(60); // This will trigger Stack Overflow stack.display(); System.out.println("Peek: " + stack.peek()); System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); stack.display(); System.out.println("Size: " + stack.size()); }}```**Output:**```Pushed: 10Pushed: 20Pushed: 30Pushed: 40Pushed: 50Stack Overflow! Cannot push 60Stack (top → bottom): 50 40 30 20 10Peek: 50Pop: 50Pop: 40Stack (top → bottom): 30 20 10Size: 3Key Points about Array Implementation:Fixed size — you must declare capacity upfrontVery fast — direct array index accessStack Overflow is possible if capacity is exceededMemory is pre-allocated even if stack is not full6. Implementation 2 — Using an ArrayListAn ArrayList-based stack removes the fixed-size limitation. The ArrayList grows dynamically, so you never have to worry about stack overflow due to capacity.How it works:The end of the ArrayList acts as the topadd() is used for pushremove(size - 1) is used for popget(size - 1) is used for peek// StackUsingArrayList.javaimport java.util.ArrayList;public class StackUsingArrayList { private ArrayList<Integer> list; // Constructor public StackUsingArrayList() { list = new ArrayList<>(); } // Push: add to the end (which is our top) public void push(int value) { list.add(value); System.out.println("Pushed: " + value); } // Pop: remove and return the last element public int pop() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack Underflow! Stack is empty."); return -1; } int top = list.get(list.size() - 1); list.remove(list.size() - 1); return top; } // Peek: view the last element public int peek() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack is empty."); return -1; } return list.get(list.size() - 1); } // Check if stack is empty public boolean isEmpty() { return list.isEmpty(); } // Return size public int size() { return list.size(); } // Display elements from top to bottom public void display() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack is empty."); return; } System.out.print("Stack (top → bottom): "); for (int i = list.size() - 1; i >= 0; i--) { System.out.print(list.get(i) + " "); } System.out.println(); } // Main method to test public static void main(String[] args) { StackUsingArrayList stack = new StackUsingArrayList(); stack.push(5); stack.push(15); stack.push(25); stack.push(35); stack.display(); System.out.println("Peek: " + stack.peek()); System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); stack.display(); System.out.println("Is Empty: " + stack.isEmpty()); System.out.println("Size: " + stack.size()); }}```**Output:**```Pushed: 5Pushed: 15Pushed: 25Pushed: 35Stack (top → bottom): 35 25 15 5Peek: 35Pop: 35Pop: 25Stack (top → bottom): 15 5Is Empty: falseSize: 2Key Points about ArrayList Implementation:Dynamic size — grows automatically as neededNo overflow riskSlight overhead compared to raw array due to ArrayList internalsExcellent for most practical use cases7. Implementation 3 — Using a LinkedListA LinkedList-based stack is the most memory-efficient approach when you do not know the stack size in advance. Each element (node) holds data and a pointer to the next node. The head of the LinkedList acts as the top of the stack.How it works:Each node stores a value and a reference to the node below itPush creates a new node and makes it the new headPop removes the head node and returns its valuePeek returns the head node's value without removing it// StackUsingLinkedList.javapublic class StackUsingLinkedList { // Inner Node class private static class Node { int data; Node next; Node(int data) { this.data = data; this.next = null; } } private Node top; // Head of the linked list = top of stack private int size; // Constructor public StackUsingLinkedList() { top = null; size = 0; } // Push: create new node and link it to top public void push(int value) { Node newNode = new Node(value); newNode.next = top; // new node points to current top top = newNode; // new node becomes the new top size++; System.out.println("Pushed: " + value); } // Pop: remove and return top node's data public int pop() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack Underflow! Stack is empty."); return -1; } int value = top.data; top = top.next; // move top pointer to next node size--; return value; } // Peek: return top node's data without removing public int peek() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack is empty."); return -1; } return top.data; } // Check if empty public boolean isEmpty() { return top == null; } // Return size public int size() { return size; } // Display elements from top to bottom public void display() { if (isEmpty()) { System.out.println("Stack is empty."); return; } System.out.print("Stack (top → bottom): "); Node current = top; while (current != null) { System.out.print(current.data + " "); current = current.next; } System.out.println(); } // Main method to test public static void main(String[] args) { StackUsingLinkedList stack = new StackUsingLinkedList(); stack.push(100); stack.push(200); stack.push(300); stack.push(400); stack.display(); System.out.println("Peek: " + stack.peek()); System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); stack.display(); System.out.println("Size: " + stack.size()); }}```**Output:**```Pushed: 100Pushed: 200Pushed: 300Pushed: 400Stack (top → bottom): 400 300 200 100Peek: 400Pop: 400Pop: 300Stack (top → bottom): 200 100Size: 2Key Points about LinkedList Implementation:Truly dynamic — each node allocated only when neededNo wasted memory from pre-allocationSlightly more memory per element (each node carries a pointer)Ideal for stacks where size is completely unknown8. Java's Built-in Stack ClassJava provides a ready-made Stack class inside java.util. It extends Vector and is thread-safe by default.// JavaBuiltinStack.javaimport java.util.Stack;public class JavaBuiltinStack { public static void main(String[] args) { Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>(); // Push elements stack.push(10); stack.push(20); stack.push(30); stack.push(40); System.out.println("Stack: " + stack); // Peek — look at top without removing System.out.println("Peek: " + stack.peek()); // Pop — remove top System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); System.out.println("After pop: " + stack); // Search — returns 1-based position from top System.out.println("Search 20: position " + stack.search(20)); // isEmpty System.out.println("Is Empty: " + stack.isEmpty()); // Size System.out.println("Size: " + stack.size()); }}```**Output:**```Stack: [10, 20, 30, 40]Peek: 40Pop: 40After pop: [10, 20, 30]Search 20: position 2Is Empty: falseSize: 3Important Note: In modern Java development, it is often recommended to use Deque (specifically ArrayDeque) instead of Stack for better performance, since Stack is synchronized and carries the overhead of Vector.// Using ArrayDeque as a stack (modern preferred approach)import java.util.ArrayDeque;import java.util.Deque;public class ModernStack { public static void main(String[] args) { Deque<Integer> stack = new ArrayDeque<>(); stack.push(10); // pushes to front stack.push(20); stack.push(30); System.out.println("Top: " + stack.peek()); System.out.println("Pop: " + stack.pop()); System.out.println("Stack: " + stack); }}9. Comparison of All ImplementationsFeatureArrayArrayListLinkedListJava StackArrayDequeSizeFixedDynamicDynamicDynamicDynamicStack Overflow RiskYesNoNoNoNoMemory UsagePre-allocatedAuto-growsPer-node overheadAuto-growsAuto-growsPush TimeO(1)O(1) amortizedO(1)O(1)O(1)Pop TimeO(1)O(1)O(1)O(1)O(1)Peek TimeO(1)O(1)O(1)O(1)O(1)Thread SafeNoNoNoYesNoBest ForKnown size, max speedGeneral useUnknown/huge sizeLegacy codeModern Java10. Advantages & DisadvantagesAdvantagesAdvantageExplanationSimple to implementVery few rules and operations to worry aboutO(1) operationsPush, pop, and peek are all constant timeMemory efficientNo extra pointers needed (array-based)Supports recursionThe call stack is itself a stackEasy undo/redoNatural fit for reversible action trackingBacktrackingPerfectly suited for maze, puzzle, and game solvingExpression evaluationPowers compilers and calculatorsDisadvantagesDisadvantageExplanationLimited accessCannot access elements in the middle directlyFixed size (array)Array-based stacks overflow if size is exceededNo random accessYou cannot do stack[2] — only top is accessibleMemory waste (array)Pre-allocated array wastes space if underusedNot suitable for all problemsMany problems need queues, trees, or graphs insteadStack overflow in recursionVery deep recursion can overflow the JVM call stack11. Real-World Use Cases of StackUnderstanding when to use a stack is just as important as knowing how to implement one. Here is where stacks show up in real software:Function Call Management (Call Stack) Every time your Java program calls a method, the JVM pushes that method's frame onto the call stack. When the method returns, the frame is popped. This is why you see "StackOverflowError" when you write infinite recursion.Undo and Redo Operations Text editors, image editors (Photoshop), and IDEs use two stacks — one for undo history and one for redo history. Every action pushes onto the undo stack. Ctrl+Z pops from it and pushes to the redo stack.Browser Navigation Your browser maintains a back-stack and a forward-stack. Visiting a new page pushes to the back-stack. Pressing Back pops from it and pushes to the forward-stack.Expression Evaluation and Conversion Compilers use stacks to evaluate arithmetic expressions and convert between infix, prefix, and postfix notations. For example: 3 + 4 * 2 must be evaluated considering operator precedence — this is done with a stack.Balanced Parentheses Checking Linters, compilers, and IDEs use stacks to check if brackets are balanced: {[()]} is valid, {[(])} is not.Backtracking Algorithms Maze solving, N-Queens, Sudoku solvers, and depth-first search all use stacks (explicitly or via recursion) to backtrack to previous states when a path fails.Syntax Parsing Compilers parse source code using stacks to match opening and closing constructs like if/else, try/catch, { and }.12. Practice Problems with Full SolutionsHere is where things get really interesting. These problems will sharpen your stack intuition and prepare you for coding interviews.Problem 1 — Reverse a String Using a StackDifficulty: EasyProblem: Write a Java program to reverse a string using a Stack.Approach: Push every character of the string onto a stack, then pop them all. Since LIFO reverses the order, the characters come out reversed.// ReverseString.javaimport java.util.Stack;public class ReverseString { public static String reverse(String str) { Stack<Character> stack = new Stack<>(); // Push all characters for (char c : str.toCharArray()) { stack.push(c); } // Pop all characters to build reversed string StringBuilder reversed = new StringBuilder(); while (!stack.isEmpty()) { reversed.append(stack.pop()); } return reversed.toString(); } public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(reverse("hello")); // olleh System.out.println(reverse("java")); // avaj System.out.println(reverse("racecar")); // racecar (palindrome) System.out.println(reverse("datastructure")); // erutcurtasatad }}Problem 2 — Check Balanced ParenthesesDifficulty: Easy–MediumProblem: Given a string containing (, ), {, }, [, ], determine if the brackets are balanced.Approach: Push every opening bracket onto the stack. When you see a closing bracket, check if it matches the top of the stack. If it does, pop. If it does not, the string is unbalanced.// BalancedParentheses.javaimport java.util.Stack;public class BalancedParentheses { public static boolean isBalanced(String expr) { Stack<Character> stack = new Stack<>(); for (char c : expr.toCharArray()) { // Push all opening brackets if (c == '(' || c == '{' || c == '[') { stack.push(c); } // For closing brackets, check the top of stack else if (c == ')' || c == '}' || c == ']') { if (stack.isEmpty()) return false; char top = stack.pop(); if (c == ')' && top != '(') return false; if (c == '}' && top != '{') return false; if (c == ']' && top != '[') return false; } } // Stack must be empty at the end for a balanced expression return stack.isEmpty(); } public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(isBalanced("{[()]}")); // true System.out.println(isBalanced("{[(])}")); // false System.out.println(isBalanced("((()))")); // true System.out.println(isBalanced("{]")); // false System.out.println(isBalanced("")); // true (empty is balanced) }}Problem 3 — Reverse a Stack (Without Extra Data Structure)Difficulty: Medium–HardProblem: Reverse all elements of a stack using only recursion — no array or extra stack allowed.Approach: This is a classic recursion problem. You need two recursive functions:insertAtBottom(stack, item) — inserts an element at the very bottom of the stackreverseStack(stack) — pops all elements, reverses, and uses insertAtBottom to rebuild// ReverseStack.javaimport java.util.Stack;public class ReverseStack { // Insert an element at the bottom of the stack public static void insertAtBottom(Stack<Integer> stack, int item) { if (stack.isEmpty()) { stack.push(item); return; } int top = stack.pop(); insertAtBottom(stack, item); stack.push(top); } // Reverse the stack using insertAtBottom public static void reverseStack(Stack<Integer> stack) { if (stack.isEmpty()) return; int top = stack.pop(); reverseStack(stack); // reverse the remaining stack insertAtBottom(stack, top); // insert popped element at bottom } public static void main(String[] args) { Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>(); stack.push(1); stack.push(2); stack.push(3); stack.push(4); stack.push(5); System.out.println("Before: " + stack); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] reverseStack(stack); System.out.println("After: " + stack); // [5, 4, 3, 2, 1] }}Problem 4 — Evaluate a Postfix ExpressionDifficulty: MediumProblem: Evaluate a postfix (Reverse Polish Notation) expression. Example: "2 3 4 * +" should return 14 because it is 2 + (3 * 4).Approach: Scan left to right. If you see a number, push it. If you see an operator, pop two numbers, apply the operator, and push the result.// PostfixEvaluation.javaimport java.util.Stack;public class PostfixEvaluation { public static int evaluate(String expression) { Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>(); String[] tokens = expression.split(" "); for (String token : tokens) { // If it's a number, push it if (token.matches("-?\\d+")) { stack.push(Integer.parseInt(token)); } // If it's an operator, pop two and apply else { int b = stack.pop(); // second operand int a = stack.pop(); // first operand switch (token) { case "+": stack.push(a + b); break; case "-": stack.push(a - b); break; case "*": stack.push(a * b); break; case "/": stack.push(a / b); break; } } } return stack.pop(); } public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(evaluate("2 3 4 * +")); // 14 → 2 + (3*4) System.out.println(evaluate("5 1 2 + 4 * + 3 -")); // 14 → 5+((1+2)*4)-3 System.out.println(evaluate("3 4 +")); // 7 }}Problem 5 — Next Greater ElementDifficulty: MediumProblem: For each element in an array, find the next greater element to its right. If none exists, output -1.Example: Input: [4, 5, 2, 10, 8] → Output: [5, 10, 10, -1, -1]Approach: Iterate right to left. Maintain a stack of candidates. For each element, pop all stack elements that are smaller than or equal to it — they can never be the answer for any element to the left. The top of the stack (if not empty) is the next greater element.// NextGreaterElement.javaimport java.util.Stack;import java.util.Arrays;public class NextGreaterElement { public static int[] nextGreater(int[] arr) { int n = arr.length; int[] result = new int[n]; Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>(); // stores elements, not indices // Traverse from right to left for (int i = n - 1; i >= 0; i--) { // Pop elements smaller than or equal to current while (!stack.isEmpty() && stack.peek() <= arr[i]) { stack.pop(); } // Next greater element result[i] = stack.isEmpty() ? -1 : stack.peek(); // Push current element for future comparisons stack.push(arr[i]); } return result; } public static void main(String[] args) { int[] arr1 = {4, 5, 2, 10, 8}; System.out.println(Arrays.toString(nextGreater(arr1))); // [5, 10, 10, -1, -1] int[] arr2 = {1, 3, 2, 4}; System.out.println(Arrays.toString(nextGreater(arr2))); // [3, 4, 4, -1] int[] arr3 = {5, 4, 3, 2, 1}; System.out.println(Arrays.toString(nextGreater(arr3))); // [-1, -1, -1, -1, -1] }}Problem 6 — Sort a Stack Using RecursionDifficulty: HardProblem: Sort a stack in ascending order (smallest on top) using only recursion — no loops, no extra data structure.// SortStack.javaimport java.util.Stack;public class SortStack { // Insert element in correct sorted position public static void sortedInsert(Stack<Integer> stack, int item) { if (stack.isEmpty() || item > stack.peek()) { stack.push(item); return; } int top = stack.pop(); sortedInsert(stack, item); stack.push(top); } // Sort the stack public static void sortStack(Stack<Integer> stack) { if (stack.isEmpty()) return; int top = stack.pop(); sortStack(stack); // sort remaining sortedInsert(stack, top); // insert top in sorted position } public static void main(String[] args) { Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>(); stack.push(34); stack.push(3); stack.push(31); stack.push(98); stack.push(92); stack.push(23); System.out.println("Before sort: " + stack); sortStack(stack); System.out.println("After sort: " + stack); // smallest on top }}13. Summary & Key TakeawaysA stack is a simple, elegant, and powerful data structure. Here is everything in one place:What it is: A linear data structure that follows LIFO — Last In, First Out.Core operations: push (add to top), pop (remove from top), peek (view top), isEmpty — all in O(1) time.Three ways to implement it in Java:Array-based: fast, fixed size, risk of overflowArrayList-based: dynamic, easy, slightly more overheadLinkedList-based: truly dynamic, memory-efficient per-element, best for unknown sizesWhen to use it:Undo/redo systemsBrowser navigationBalancing brackets and parenthesesEvaluating mathematical expressionsBacktracking problemsManaging recursive function callsDepth-first searchWhen NOT to use it:When you need random access to elementsWhen insertion/deletion is needed from both ends (use Deque)When you need to search efficiently (use HashMap or BST)Modern Java recommendation: Prefer ArrayDeque over the legacy Stack class for non-thread-safe scenarios. Use Stack only when you need synchronized access.The stack is one of those data structures that once you truly understand, you start seeing it everywhere — in your browser, in your IDE, in recursive algorithms, and deep within the operating system itself.This article covered everything from the fundamentals of the Stack data structure to multiple Java implementations, time complexity analysis, real-world applications, and six practice problems of increasing difficulty. Bookmark it as a reference and revisit the practice problems regularly — they are the real test of your understanding.

DataStructuresJavaStackDataStructureLIFO
Understanding HashMap and Hashing Techniques: A Complete Guide

Understanding HashMap and Hashing Techniques: A Complete Guide

What is HashMap?HashMap is a non-linear data structure that lives inside Java's collection framework, alongside other structures like Trees and Graphs (see the generated image above). What makes it special? It uses a clever technique called hashing to store and retrieve data at blazing speeds.Think of hashing as a smart address system. It converts large keys (like long strings or big numbers) into smaller values that work as array indices. This simple trick transforms your data lookup from slow O(n)O(n) or O(log⁡n)O(logn) operations into lightning-fast O(1)O(1) access times!Understanding Hashing MappingsBefore diving deeper, let's understand the four types of hashing mappings:One-to-one mapping — Each key maps to exactly one indexMany-to-one mapping — Multiple keys can map to the same indexOne-to-many mapping — One key maps to multiple indicesMany-to-many mapping — Multiple keys map to multiple indicesHashMap primarily uses one-to-one and many-to-one mapping strategies to achieve its performance goals.The Problem: Why Not Just Use Arrays?Let's say you want to store 7 elements with keys: 1, 5, 23, 57, 234, 678, and 1000.Using direct indexing (where key = array index), you'd need an array of size 1000 just to store 7 items! That leaves 993 empty slots wasting precious memory. Imagine having a parking lot with 1000 spaces for just 7 cars — totally inefficient!This is the exact problem hash functions solve.Hash Functions: The SolutionA hash function takes your key and calculates which array index to use. The beauty? You can now store those same 7 elements in an array of just size 10!The most common hash function uses the modulus operator:hash(key)=keymod array sizehash(key)=keymodarray sizeExample: With array size = 10:Key 57 → Index: 57mod 10=757mod10=7Key 234 → Index: 234mod 10=4234mod10=4Key 1000 → Index: 1000mod 10=01000mod10=0Now you only need an array of size 10 instead of 1000. Problem solved!Three Popular Hash Function TypesModulus MethodThe most widely used technique. Divide the key by array size (or a prime number) and use the remainder as the index.index=keymod sizeindex=keymodsizeMid Square MethodSquare the key value, then extract the middle digits to form your hash value.Example: Key = 57 → 572=3249572=3249 → Extract middle digits "24"Folding HashingDivide the key into equal parts, add them together, then apply modulus.Example: Key = 123456Split into: 12, 34, 56Sum: 12+34+56=10212+34+56=102Apply modulus: 102mod 10=2102mod10=2The Collision ProblemHere's the catch: sometimes two different keys produce the same index. This is called a collision.Example:Key 27 → 27mod 10=727mod10=7Key 57 → 57mod 10=757mod10=7Both keys want index 7! We need smart strategies to handle this.Collision Resolution: Two Main TechniquesTechnique 1: Open Chaining (Separate Chaining)Mapping Type: Many-to-oneWhen a collision happens, create a linked list at that index and store all colliding values in sorted order.Example: Keys 22 and 32 both map to index 2:Index 2: [22] → [32] → nullAdvantage: Simple and works well in practiceDrawback: If too many collisions occur, the linked list becomes long and searching degrades to O(n)O(n). However, Java's collection framework uses highly optimized hash functions that achieve amortized O(1)O(1) time complexity.Technique 2: Closed Addressing (Open Addressing)Mapping Type: One-to-manyInstead of creating a list, find another empty slot in the array. There are three approaches:Linear ProbingWhen collision occurs, check the next index. If it's occupied, keep checking the next one until you find an empty slot.Hash Function:h(x)=xmod sizeh(x)=xmodsizeOn Collision:h(x)=(h(x)+i)mod sizeh(x)=(h(x)+i)modsizewhere i=0,1,2,3,…i=0,1,2,3,…Example: Keys 22 and 32 both map to index 2:Store 22 at index 2Try 32 at index 2 → occupiedCheck index 3 → empty, store 32 thereProblems:Clustering: Keys bunch together in adjacent indices, slowing down searchesDeleted Slot Problem: When you delete a key, it creates an empty slot that breaks the search chainThe Deleted Slot Problem Explained:Keys 22 and 32 are at indices 2 and 3Delete key 22 from index 2Now when searching for key 32, the algorithm reaches index 2 (empty), thinks key 32 doesn't exist, and stops searching!Solution: Mark deleted slots with a special marker (like -1) or perform rehashing after deletions.Quadratic ProbingSame concept as linear probing, but instead of checking consecutive slots, jump in quadratic increments: 1, 4, 9, 16, 25...Hash Function:h(x)=xmod sizeh(x)=xmodsizeOn Collision:h(x)=(h(x)+i2)mod sizeh(x)=(h(x)+i2)modsizewhere i=0,1,2,3,…i=0,1,2,3,…Advantage: Significantly reduces clusteringDrawback: Still suffers from the deleted slot problemDouble HashingThe most sophisticated approach! Uses two different hash functions to create unique probe sequences for each key.First Hash Function:h1(x)=xmod sizeh1(x)=xmodsizeSecond Hash Function:h2(x)=prime−(xmod prime)h2(x)=prime−(xmodprime)On Collision:h(x)=(h1(x)+i×h2(x))mod sizeh(x)=(h1(x)+i×h2(x))modsizewhere i=0,1,2,3,…i=0,1,2,3,…Advantage: Effectively avoids clustering and provides the best performance among probing techniquesLoad Factor: The Performance IndicatorThe load factor tells you how full your hash table is:Load Factor=Number of elementsArray sizeLoad Factor=Array sizeNumber of elementsPerformance GuidelinesLoad Factor ≤ 0.5 → Good performance, fast operations Load Factor > 0.7 → Poor performance, time to rehash ExamplesBad Load Factor:Array size = 10, Elements = 8Load Factor = 8/10=0.88/10=0.8Action: Rehash the array (typically double the size)Good Load Factor:Array size = 200, Elements = 100Load Factor = 100/200=0.5100/200=0.5Action: No changes needed, performing optimallyWhat is Rehashing?When the load factor exceeds the threshold (usually 0.7), the hash table is resized — typically doubled in size. All existing elements are then rehashed and redistributed into the new larger array. This maintains optimal performance as your data grows.Performance SummaryHashMap delivers exceptional average-case performance:Insertion: O(1)O(1)Deletion: O(1)O(1)Search: O(1)O(1)However, in the worst case (many collisions with poor hash functions), operations can degrade to O(n)O(n).The key to maintaining O(1)O(1) performance:Use a good hash functionChoose an appropriate collision resolution strategyMonitor and maintain a healthy load factorRehash when necessaryConclusionHashMap is one of the most powerful and frequently used data structures in programming. By understanding hashing techniques, collision resolution strategies, and load factors, you can write more efficient code and make better design decisions.Whether you're building a cache, implementing a frequency counter, or solving complex algorithm problems, HashMap is your go-to tool for fast data access!

hashmapdata-structureshashingjavaalgorithmscollision-resolutiontime-complexity
My 2025 Year Rewind: Krishna Shrivastava

My 2025 Year Rewind: Krishna Shrivastava

My 2025 Builder Rewind: From Overthinking to Getting it Done2025 wasn't the year where everything suddenly worked out for me.No big announcements. No viral launches.But this was the year I stopped staying in perpetual learning mode and started building real things.Instead of waiting to be "ready," I shipped projects. Some were small, some were complex, and some broke more times than I expected — but every one of them taught me something real about what it actually takes to build software that works beyond localhost.Here's a rewind of what I built this year and why each one mattered.Brillicode — Online Code IDE & CompilerTry Brillicode →Brillicode is a browser-based code editor where you can write and compile code in multiple programming languages without setting up anything locally.I built this because environment setup is still one of the biggest blockers for beginners — and even experienced devs sometimes just want to test an idea quickly without spinning up Docker containers or installing dependencies.What this project taught me:Running untrusted user code is risky and complex. Sandboxing, resource limits, and security aren't nice-to-haves — they're critical from day one. One infinite loop could crash the entire server if not properly isolated.Edge cases are not actually edge cases. Syntax errors, empty inputs, massive files, concurrent requests — these happen constantly in production and need proper handling.This was my first real push beyond frontend thinking into building systems that need to handle unpredictable user behavior reliably.Mokai — Online Mock Test PlatformTake a Mock Test →Mokai is an online mock test platform where users can take role-based mock tests, track their test history over time, and compete using a leaderboard system.This wasn't just about creating another quiz app. I deliberately focused on things that are usually ignored in side projects but critical in production systems:Security — Never trusting client-side data blindly. Validation happens on the server, answers are verified server-side, and timing is controlled backend-first.Caching — Implementing smart caching strategies to reduce database load and improve response times without serving stale data.Fair and consistent test evaluation — Ensuring the scoring system works identically for all users regardless of network conditions or device performance.This project made one thing crystal clear to me: "It works on my machine" is not the same as "it works correctly for real users."Working on Mokai taught me about database optimization, proper API design, AI integration and why authentication/authorization patterns exist the way they do.Krido Studio — Code Writing Video GeneratorGenerate Your Video →Krido Studio turns plain code into professional code-writing videos:Paste your codeGenerate smooth typing animationAdd voice-over and customize timingExport and post directly to YouTube or social mediaI built this because creating coding content is harder than it should be. Screen recording, editing, syncing audio, re-recording when you make typos — it's all slow, manual, and exhausting.What made Krido challenging:Animation timing — Making the typing speed feel natural, not robotic. Too fast feels fake, too slow loses viewer attention.UX details that break easily if done wrong — Things like preview accuracy, progress indicators, and error messages when generation fails.A cool idea on paper, but way harder in execution — and that's exactly why it was worth building. Krido Studio attracted 100+ visitors organically and taught me that solving real creator pain points matters more than technical complexity.My First Mobile App — Calculator (React Native + Expo)Download APK → | GitHub →This was a simple calculator app built using React Native with Expo, packaged into a real APK and installed on actual Android devices.I didn't build this to innovate or disrupt the calculator market.I built it to understand mobile app development — from writing React Native code to generating a working APK that real people can download and use.What I learned:Mobile apps have their own constraints. Touch targets, screen sizes, keyboard behavior, app lifecycle — everything behaves differently from the web.Packaging and builds are real challenges. Gradle errors, dependency conflicts, signing certificates — the "boring" DevOps side of mobile is where beginners get stuck.Cross-platform doesn't mean zero platform knowledge. You still need to understand Android/iOS differences, even when using React Native.This project removed my hesitation around mobile development completely. Now I know that shipping mobile apps is very achievable, not some mystical separate skill tree.Karos — My First Published NPM PackageInstall: npm install karos → | GitHub → | BlogKaros is a Node.js utility package that standardizes API responses and error handling for Express applications.I built it because every backend project ends up doing the same thing manually:Different JSON response formats across routesInconsistent HTTP status codesMessy error handling with try-catch everywhereNo predictable structure for frontend developersInstead of rewriting the same wrapper functions again and again, I packaged it into a reusable library with TypeScript support and clean documentation.What publishing Karos taught me:Small, boring tools can still be valuable. Not every package needs to be a framework. Solving one specific pain point well is enough.Documentation matters more than clever code. If other developers can't understand how to use it in 2 minutes, they'll just write their own version.Shipping something is more important than perfect design. I can always publish v2 with improvements. Version 1 just needs to work and solve the core problem.Publishing Karos was a huge personal milestone — it's one thing to write code for yourself, another to write code that others trust enough to install in their projects.What This Year Actually ChangedThis year didn't make me an expert.But it did something more important.It forced me to:Stop hiding behind tutorials and actually finish what I startThink in terms of systems, not just features — considering failure modes, scale, and maintainabilityAccept that breaking things is part of building things — bugs aren't failures, they're feedbackShip imperfect products instead of perfect plans that never launchMost of what I built won't go viral — and that's completely okay.What matters is that I now understand how real projects behave in the real world: how users break assumptions, how systems fail under load, and how to recover gracefully when things go wrong.On to 2026Next year isn't about building more projects just to build them.It's about:Taking existing projects deeper (scaling Krido, improving Mokai's backend architecture)Contributing to open source beyond my own packagesWriting more technical content sharing what I've learnedFocusing on fewer things, but executing them at a higher levelIf you've been stuck in tutorial hell or afraid to ship something "not good enough yet" — this is your sign.Pick one idea. Scope it down brutally. Build it. Ship it. Learn from it.The version you release today will always teach you more than the perfect version that never leaves your localhost.Happy New Year 🎉Connect with me:📝 Read more on my blog: KodeSword💻 GitHub:Github Krishna Shrivastava🔗 LinkedIn: LinkedIn Krishna Shrivastava📦 NPM: NPM Pakcage KAROS📩 Contact me: Reach Out Me

YearInReview2025Rewind
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