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中文文档

Description

Given two string arrays word1 and word2, return true if the two arrays represent the same string, and false otherwise.

A string is represented by an array if the array elements concatenated in order forms the string.

 

Example 1:

Input: word1 = ["ab", "c"], word2 = ["a", "bc"]
Output: true
Explanation:
word1 represents string "ab" + "c" -> "abc"
word2 represents string "a" + "bc" -> "abc"
The strings are the same, so return true.

Example 2:

Input: word1 = ["a", "cb"], word2 = ["ab", "c"]
Output: false

Example 3:

Input: word1  = ["abc", "d", "defg"], word2 = ["abcddefg"]
Output: true

 

Constraints:

  • 1 <= word1.length, word2.length <= 103
  • 1 <= word1[i].length, word2[i].length <= 103
  • 1 <= sum(word1[i].length), sum(word2[i].length) <= 103
  • word1[i] and word2[i] consist of lowercase letters.

Solutions

Python3

class Solution:
    def arrayStringsAreEqual(self, word1: List[str], word2: List[str]) -> bool:
        s1, s2 = ''.join(word1), ''.join(word2)
        return s1 == s2

Java

class Solution {
    public boolean arrayStringsAreEqual(String[] word1, String[] word2) {
        StringBuilder s1 = new StringBuilder();
        StringBuilder s2 = new StringBuilder();
        for (String word : word1) {
            s1.append(word);
        }
        for (String word : word2) {
            s2.append(word);
        }
        return Objects.equals(s1.toString(), s2.toString());
    }
}

TypeScript

function arrayStringsAreEqual(word1: string[], word2: string[]): boolean {
    let s1 = word1.join(''),
        s2 = word2.join('');
    return s1 == s2;
}

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