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657.RobotReturntoOrigin.py
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657.RobotReturntoOrigin.py
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"""
There is a robot starting at position (0, 0), the origin, on a 2D plane.
Given a sequence of its moves, judge if this robot ends up at (0, 0) after
it completes its moves.
The move sequence is represented by a string, and the character moves[i]
represents its ith move. Valid moves are R (right), L (left), U (up), and
D (down). If the robot returns to the origin after it finishes all of its
moves, return true. Otherwise, return false.
Note: The way that the robot is "facing" is irrelevant. "R" will always
make the robot move to the right once, "L" will always make it move left,
etc. Also, assume that the magnitude of the robot's movement is the same
for each move.
Example:
Input: "UD"
Output: true
Explanation: The robot moves up once, and then down once. All moves have
the same magnitude, so it ended up at the origin where it
started. Therefore, we return true.
Example:
Input: "LL"
Output: false
Explanation: The robot moves left twice. It ends up two "moves" to the left
of the origin. We return false because it is not at the origin
at the end of its moves.
"""
#Difficulty: Easy
#63 / 63 test cases passed.
#Runtime: 48 ms
#Memory Usage: 13.7 MB
#Runtime: 48 ms, faster than 84.21% of Python3 online submissions for Robot Return to Origin.
#Memory Usage: 13.7 MB, less than 93.39% of Python3 online submissions for Robot Return to Origin.
class Solution:
def judgeCircle(self, moves: str) -> bool:
path = {'L' : 0, 'R' : 0, 'U' : 0, 'D' : 0}
for move in moves:
path[move] += 1
return path['L'] == path['R'] and path['U'] == path['D']