You are given the array paths
, where paths[i] = [cityAi, cityBi]
means there exists a direct path going from cityAi
to cityBi
. Return the destination city, that is, the city without any path outgoing to another city.
It is guaranteed that the graph of paths forms a line without any loop, therefore, there will be exactly one destination city.
Input: paths = [["London","New York"],["New York","Lima"],["Lima","Sao Paulo"]] Output: "Sao Paulo" Explanation: Starting at "London" city you will reach "Sao Paulo" city which is the destination city. Your trip consist of: "London" -> "New York" -> "Lima" -> "Sao Paulo".
Input: paths = [["B","C"],["D","B"],["C","A"]] Output: "A" Explanation: All possible trips are: "D" -> "B" -> "C" -> "A". "B" -> "C" -> "A". "C" -> "A". "A". Clearly the destination city is "A".
Input: paths = [["A","Z"]] Output: "Z"
1 <= paths.length <= 100
paths[i].length == 2
1 <= cityAi.length, cityBi.length <= 10
cityAi != cityBi
- All strings consist of lowercase and uppercase English letters and the space character.
use std::collections::HashSet;
impl Solution {
pub fn dest_city(paths: Vec<Vec<String>>) -> String {
let city_a = paths.iter().map(|path| &path[0]).collect::<HashSet<_>>();
paths
.iter()
.find(|path| !city_a.contains(&path[1]))
.unwrap()[1]
.clone()
}
}