The count-and-say sequence is the sequence of integers with the first five terms as following:
1. 1
2. 11
3. 21
4. 1211
5. 111221
1
is read off as "one 1"
or 11
.
11
is read off as "two 1s"
or 21
.
21
is read off as "one 2
, then one 1"
or 1211
.
Given an integer n where 1 ≤ n ≤ 30, generate the nth term of the count-and-say sequence.
Note: Each term of the sequence of integers will be represented as a string.
Input: 1 Output: "1"
Input: 4 Output: "1211"
class Solution:
def countAndSay(self, n: int) -> str:
s = "1"
for i in range(n - 1):
tmp = ""
i = 0
for j in range(len(s)):
if s[i] != s[j]:
tmp += str(j - i) + s[i]
i = j
tmp += str(len(s) - i) + s[i]
s = tmp
return s
# @param {Integer} n
# @return {String}
def count_and_say(n)
s = "1"
for _ in 1...n
tmp = ""
i = 0
for j in 0...s.length
if s[i] != s[j]
tmp += (j - i).to_s + s[i]
i = j
end
end
tmp += (s.length - i).to_s + s[i]
s = tmp
end
return s
end