Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History

day6

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

parent directory

..
 
 
 
 

Given an integer array nums, a reducer function fn, and an initial value init, return a reduced array.

A reduced array is created by applying the following operation: val = fn(init, nums[0]), val = fn(val, nums[1]), val = fn(val, nums[2]), ... until every element in the array has been processed. The final value of val is returned.

If the length of the array is 0, it should return init.

Please solve it without using the built-in Array.reduce method.

Example 1:

Input: nums = [1,2,3,4] fn = function sum(accum, curr) { return accum + curr; } init = 0 Output: 10 Explanation: initially, the value is init=0. (0) + nums[0] = 1 (1) + nums[1] = 3 (3) + nums[2] = 6 (6) + nums[3] = 10 The final answer is 10.

Example 2:

Input: nums = [1,2,3,4] fn = function sum(accum, curr) { return accum + curr * curr; } init = 100 Output: 130 Explanation: initially, the value is init=100. (100) + nums[0]^2 = 101 (101) + nums[1]^2 = 105 (105) + nums[2]^2 = 114 (114) + nums[3]^2 = 130 The final answer is 130.

Example 3:

Input: nums = [] fn = function sum(accum, curr) { return 0; } init = 25 Output: 25 Explanation: For empty arrays, the answer is always init.