We are given that the string "abc"
is valid.
From any valid string V
, we may split V
into two pieces X
and Y
such that X + Y
(X
concatenated with Y
) is equal to V
. (X
or Y
may be empty.) Then, X + "abc" + Y
is also valid.
If for example S = "abc"
, then examples of valid strings are: "abc", "aabcbc", "abcabc", "abcabcababcc"
. Examples of invalid strings are: "abccba"
, "ab"
, "cababc"
, "bac"
.
Return true
if and only if the given string S
is valid.
Input: "aabcbc" Output: true Explanation: We start with the valid string "abc". Then we can insert another "abc" between "a" and "bc", resulting in "a" + "abc" + "bc" which is "aabcbc".
Input: "abcabcababcc" Output: true Explanation: "abcabcabc" is valid after consecutive insertings of "abc". Then we can insert "abc" before the last letter, resulting in "abcabcab" + "abc" + "c" which is "abcabcababcc".
Input: "abccba" Output: false
Input: "cababc" Output: false
1 <= S.length <= 20000
S[i]
is'a'
,'b'
, or'c'
class Solution:
def isValid(self, S: str) -> bool:
while 'abc' in S:
S = S.replace('abc', '')
return not S