Suppose we abstract our file system by a string in the following manner:
The string "dir\n\tsubdir1\n\tsubdir2\n\t\tfile.ext"
represents:
dir subdir1 subdir2 file.ext
The directory dir
contains an empty sub-directory subdir1
and a
sub-directory subdir2
containing a file file.ext
.
The string "dir\n\tsubdir1\n\t\tfile1.ext\n\t\tsubsubdir1\n\tsubdir2\n\t\tsubsubdir2\n\t\t\tfile2.ext"
represents:
dir subdir1 file1.ext subsubdir1 subdir2 subsubdir2 file2.ext
The directory dir
contains two sub-directories subdir1
and subdir2
.
subdir1
contains a file file1.ext
and an empty second-level
sub-directory subsubdir1
. subdir2
contains a second-level
sub-directory subsubdir2
containing a file file2.ext
.
We are interested in finding the longest (number of characters) absolute path to a file
within our file system. For example, in the second example above, the longest absolute path
is "dir/subdir2/subsubdir2/file2.ext"
, and its length is 32
(not
including the double quotes).
Given a string representing the file system in the above format, return the length of the
longest absolute path to file in the abstracted file system. If there is no file in the
system, return 0
.
Note:
.
and an extension..
.Time complexity required: O(n)
where n
is the size of the input
string.
Notice that a/aa/aaa/file1.txt
is not the longest file path, if there is another
path aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa/sth.png
.