Remove Duplicates from Sorted Array

Sergei Golitsyn
2 min readAug 28, 2022

--

For more solutions, go to: https://t.me/crack_code_interview

Given an integer array nums sorted in non-decreasing order, remove the duplicates in-place such that each unique element appears only once. The relative order of the elements should be kept the same.

Since it is impossible to change the length of the array in some languages, you must instead have the result be placed in the first part of the array nums. More formally, if there are k elements after removing the duplicates, then the first k elements of nums should hold the final result. It does not matter what you leave beyond the first k elements.

Return k after placing the final result in the first k slots of nums.

Do not allocate extra space for another array. You must do this by modifying the input array in-place with O(1) extra memory.

Custom Judge:

The judge will test your solution with the following code:

int[] nums = [...]; // Input array
int[] expectedNums = [...]; // The expected answer with correct length
int k = removeDuplicates(nums); // Calls your implementationassert k == expectedNums.length;
for (int i = 0; i < k; i++) {
assert nums[i] == expectedNums[i];
}

If all assertions pass, then your solution will be accepted.

Example 1:

Input: nums = [1,1,2]
Output: 2, nums = [1,2,_]
Explanation: Your function should return k = 2, with the first two elements of nums being 1 and 2 respectively.
It does not matter what you leave beyond the returned k (hence they are underscores).

Example 2:

Input: nums = [0,0,1,1,1,2,2,3,3,4]
Output: 5, nums = [0,1,2,3,4,_,_,_,_,_]
Explanation: Your function should return k = 5, with the first five elements of nums being 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4 respectively.
It does not matter what you leave beyond the returned k (hence they are underscores).

Solution:

Do you remember the slow/fast pointer technic? In this problem, we will use it again.

We know that our array was sorted. Let’s use it. We are preparing reader and writer pointers. If our next element is the same as the previous one, we can skip it and increase the reader pointer.

public int removeDuplicates(int[] nums) {
int reader = 1;
int writer = 0;

while (reader < nums.length){
if (nums[writer] != nums[reader]){
nums[++writer] = nums[reader];
}
reader++;
}
return writer + 1;
}

--

--

Sergei Golitsyn
Sergei Golitsyn

Written by Sergei Golitsyn

7+ years of experience in building massively scalable systems (mostly using Java) both from scratch and diving into an existing codebase.

No responses yet