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This approach uses the two-pointer technique to check if the string is a palindrome after removing at most one character. Start with two pointers at the beginning and end of the string. Move inward while the characters at these pointers are equal. If a mismatch occurs, there are two possibilities: either remove the character at the left pointer or the right pointer. If either results in a palindrome, then the string can be considered a valid palindrome after one deletion.
Time Complexity: O(n), where n is the length of the string.
Space Complexity: O(1) as we use a constant amount of extra space.
1#include <stdbool.h>
2#include <string.h>
3
4bool isPalindromeRange(char * s, int i, int j) {
5    while (i < j) {
6        if (s[i] != s[j]) return false;
7        i++;
8        j--;
9    }
10    return true;
11}
12
13bool validPalindrome(char * s) {
14    int left = 0;
15    int right = strlen(s) - 1;
16    while (left < right) {
17        if (s[left] != s[right]) {
18            return isPalindromeRange(s, left + 1, right) || isPalindromeRange(s, left, right - 1);
19        }
20        left++;
21        right--;
22    }
23    return true;
24}The solution uses helper function isPalindromeRange to check if a sub-range of the string is a palindrome. The main function, validPalindrome, attempts to verify if the string becomes a palindrome after removing one mismatched character, if any.
This approach uses recursion to accomplish the same task. When encountering the first differing pair of characters, we make two recursive calls: one ignoring the left character and one ignoring the right character. If either recursive call results in a valid palindrome, the whole string can be considered a valid palindrome after a single character deletion.
Time Complexity: O(n)
Space Complexity: O(1) by avoiding deep recursive stacks through tail optimization.
1    public bool ValidPalindrome(string s) {
        return Helper(s, 0, s.Length - 1, false);
    }
    private bool Helper(string s, int left, int right, bool deleted) {
        while (left < right) {
            if (s[left] != s[right]) {
                if (deleted) return false;
                return Helper(s, left + 1, right, true) || Helper(s, left, right - 1, true);
            }
            left++;
            right--;
        }
        return true;
    }
}This C# version implements a recursive function approach, mirroring solutions in other languages but optimizes tail recursion where applicable.