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This approach leverages dynamic programming to solve the problem. You create a DP array where each element dp[i]
represents the maximum points that can be earned starting from question i
to the last question. You decide whether to solve or skip a question based on the potential points you can earn. The solution is filled backward, starting from the last question.
Time Complexity: O(n)
Space Complexity: O(n)
1public class Solution {
2 public int MaxPoints(int[][] questions) {
3 int n = questions.Length;
4 int[] dp = new int[n + 1];
5 for (int i = n - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
6 int solve = questions[i][0] + (i + 1 + questions[i][1] < n ? dp[i + 1 + questions[i][1]] : 0);
7 int skip = dp[i + 1];
8 dp[i] = Math.Max(solve, skip);
9 }
10 return dp[0];
11 }
12}
Similar to the Java implementation, the C# solution employs dynamic programming. It iterates the questions in reverse order, updating a DP array to record the best score achievable from the current question onward. The max operation determines whether solving the current question or skipping it yields better points, with results returned from the start position.
This approach uses recursion with memoization to avoid recomputing results for overlapping subproblems. It recursively decides the maximum points by considering both solving and skipping options for each question, and stores results in a memoization array for reuse. This provides an efficient way to solve the problem since it avoids redundant calculations.
Time Complexity: O(n)
Space Complexity: O(n)
1
This C implementation makes use of a recursive function dfs
that takes question index i
and applies memoization to keep previously calculated results. The `memo` array serves as a caching store to prevent redundant computations. Each call evaluates solving vs skipping the current question, and chooses the option with the highest potential points. The function finally returns the maximum value possible.