Medium
Given an encoded string, return its decoded string.
The encoding rule is: k[encoded_string], where the encoded_string inside the square brackets is being repeated exactly k times. Note that k is guaranteed to be a positive integer.
You may assume that the input string is always valid; there are no extra white spaces, square brackets are well-formed, etc. Furthermore, you may assume that the original data does not contain any digits and that digits are only for those repeat numbers, k. For example, there will not be input like 3a or 2[4].
The test cases are generated so that the length of the output will never exceed 105.
Example 1:
Input: s = "3[a]2[bc]" Output: "aaabcbc"
Example 2:
Input: s = "3[a2[c]]" Output: "accaccacc"
Example 3:
Input: s = "2[abc]3[cd]ef" Output: "abcabccdcdcdef"
Constraints:
1 <= s.length <= 30sconsists of lowercase English letters, digits, and square brackets'[]'.sis guaranteed to be a valid input.- All the integers in
sare in the range[1, 300].
class Solution:
def decodeString(self, s: str) -> str:
stack = []
digit_last = False
for c in s:
if c != ']':
if c.isdigit() and digit_last:
val = stack.pop()
stack.append(val+c)
else:
stack.append(c)
if c.isdigit():
digit_last = True
else:
digit_last = False
else:
string = ""
digit = None
while string=="" or digit == None:
val = stack.pop()
if val == '[':
pass
elif val.isdigit():
digit = int(val)
else:
string = val + string
stack.append(string*digit)
return ''.join(stack)