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中文文档

Description

Given the root of a binary tree, turn the tree upside down and return the new root.

You can turn a binary tree upside down with the following steps:

  1. The original left child becomes the new root.
  2. The original root becomes the new right child.
  3. The original right child becomes the new left child.

The mentioned steps are done level by level, it is guaranteed that every node in the given tree has either 0 or 2 children.

 

Example 1:

Input: root = [1,2,3,4,5]
Output: [4,5,2,null,null,3,1]

Example 2:

Input: root = []
Output: []

Example 3:

Input: root = [1]
Output: [1]

 

Constraints:

  • The number of nodes in the tree will be in the range [0, 10].
  • 1 <= Node.val <= 10
  • Every node has either 0 or 2 children.

Solutions

Python3

# Definition for a binary tree node.
# class TreeNode:
#     def __init__(self, val=0, left=None, right=None):
#         self.val = val
#         self.left = left
#         self.right = right
class Solution:
    def upsideDownBinaryTree(self, root: Optional[TreeNode]) -> Optional[TreeNode]:
        if root is None or root.left is None:
            return root
        new_root = self.upsideDownBinaryTree(root.left)
        root.left.right = root
        root.left.left = root.right
        root.left = None
        root.right = None
        return new_root

Java

/**
 * Definition for a binary tree node.
 * public class TreeNode {
 *     int val;
 *     TreeNode left;
 *     TreeNode right;
 *     TreeNode() {}
 *     TreeNode(int val) { this.val = val; }
 *     TreeNode(int val, TreeNode left, TreeNode right) {
 *         this.val = val;
 *         this.left = left;
 *         this.right = right;
 *     }
 * }
 */
class Solution {
    public TreeNode upsideDownBinaryTree(TreeNode root) {
        if (root == null || root.left == null) {
            return root;
        }
        TreeNode newRoot = upsideDownBinaryTree(root.left);
        root.left.right = root;
        root.left.left = root.right;
        root.left = null;
        root.right = null;
        return newRoot;
    }
}

C++

/**
 * Definition for a binary tree node.
 * struct TreeNode {
 *     int val;
 *     TreeNode *left;
 *     TreeNode *right;
 *     TreeNode() : val(0), left(nullptr), right(nullptr) {}
 *     TreeNode(int x) : val(x), left(nullptr), right(nullptr) {}
 *     TreeNode(int x, TreeNode *left, TreeNode *right) : val(x), left(left), right(right) {}
 * };
 */
class Solution {
public:
    TreeNode* upsideDownBinaryTree(TreeNode* root) {
        if (!root || !root->left) return root;
        TreeNode* newRoot = upsideDownBinaryTree(root->left);
        root->left->right = root;
        root->left->left = root->right;
        root->left = nullptr;
        root->right = nullptr;
        return newRoot;
    }
};

Go

/**
 * Definition for a binary tree node.
 * type TreeNode struct {
 *     Val int
 *     Left *TreeNode
 *     Right *TreeNode
 * }
 */
func upsideDownBinaryTree(root *TreeNode) *TreeNode {
	if root == nil || root.Left == nil {
		return root
	}
	newRoot := upsideDownBinaryTree(root.Left)
	root.Left.Right = root
	root.Left.Left = root.Right
	root.Left = nil
	root.Right = nil
	return newRoot
}

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