Given a string representing arbitrarily nested ternary expressions, calculate the result of the expression. You can always assume that the given expression is valid and only consists of digits 0-9
, ?
, :
, T
and F
(T
and F
represent True and False respectively).
Note:
- The length of the given string is ≤ 10000.
- Each number will contain only one digit.
- The conditional expressions group right-to-left (as usual in most languages).
- The condition will always be either
T
orF
. That is, the condition will never be a digit. - The result of the expression will always evaluate to either a digit
0-9
,T
orF
.
Example 1:
Input: "T?2:3"Output: "2"
Explanation: If true, then result is 2; otherwise result is 3.
Example 2:
Input: "F?1:T?4:5"Output: "4"
Explanation: The conditional expressions group right-to-left. Using parenthesis, it is read/evaluated as:
"(F ? 1 : (T ? 4 : 5))" "(F ? 1 : (T ? 4 : 5))" -> "(F ? 1 : 4)" or -> "(T ? 4 : 5)" -> "4" -> "4"
Example 3:
Input: "T?T?F:5:3"Output: "F"
Explanation: The conditional expressions group right-to-left. Using parenthesis, it is read/evaluated as:
"(T ? (T ? F : 5) : 3)" "(T ? (T ? F : 5) : 3)" -> "(T ? F : 3)" or -> "(T ? F : 5)" -> "F" -> "F"