Class Solution
- java.lang.Object
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- g2301_2400.s2383_minimum_hours_of_training_to_win_a_competition.Solution
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public class Solution extends Object
2383 - Minimum Hours of Training to Win a Competition.Easy
You are entering a competition, and are given two positive integers
initialEnergyandinitialExperiencedenoting your initial energy and initial experience respectively.You are also given two 0-indexed integer arrays
energyandexperience, both of lengthn.You will face
nopponents in order. The energy and experience of theithopponent is denoted byenergy[i]andexperience[i]respectively. When you face an opponent, you need to have both strictly greater experience and energy to defeat them and move to the next opponent if available.Defeating the
ithopponent increases your experience byexperience[i], but decreases your energy byenergy[i].Before starting the competition, you can train for some number of hours. After each hour of training, you can either choose to increase your initial experience by one, or increase your initial energy by one.
Return the minimum number of training hours required to defeat all
nopponents.Example 1:
Input: initialEnergy = 5, initialExperience = 3, energy = [1,4,3,2], experience = [2,6,3,1]
Output: 8
Explanation: You can increase your energy to 11 after 6 hours of training, and your experience to 5 after 2 hours of training.
You face the opponents in the following order:
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You have more energy and experience than the 0th opponent so you win.
Your energy becomes 11 - 1 = 10, and your experience becomes 5 + 2 = 7.
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You have more energy and experience than the 1st opponent so you win.
Your energy becomes 10 - 4 = 6, and your experience becomes 7 + 6 = 13.
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You have more energy and experience than the 2nd opponent so you win.
Your energy becomes 6 - 3 = 3, and your experience becomes 13 + 3 = 16.
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You have more energy and experience than the 3rd opponent so you win.
Your energy becomes 3 - 2 = 1, and your experience becomes 16 + 1 = 17.
You did a total of 6 + 2 = 8 hours of training before the competition, so we return 8.
It can be proven that no smaller answer exists.
Example 2:
Input: initialEnergy = 2, initialExperience = 4, energy = [1], experience = [3]
Output: 0
Explanation: You do not need any additional energy or experience to win the competition, so we return 0.
Constraints:
n == energy.length == experience.length1 <= n <= 1001 <= initialEnergy, initialExperience, energy[i], experience[i] <= 100
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Constructor Summary
Constructors Constructor Description Solution()
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Method Summary
All Methods Instance Methods Concrete Methods Modifier and Type Method Description intminNumberOfHours(int initialEnergy, int initialExperience, int[] energy, int[] experience)
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