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1088.py
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1088.py
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'''
We can rotate digits by 180 degrees to form new digits. When 0, 1, 6, 8, 9 are rotated 180 degrees, they become 0, 1, 9, 8, 6 respectively. When 2, 3, 4, 5 and 7 are rotated 180 degrees, they become invalid.
A confusing number is a number that when rotated 180 degrees becomes a different number with each digit valid.(Note that the rotated number can be greater than the original number.)
Given a positive integer N, return the number of confusing numbers between 1 and N inclusive.
Example 1:
Input: 20
Output: 6
Explanation:
The confusing numbers are [6,9,10,16,18,19].
6 converts to 9.
9 converts to 6.
10 converts to 01 which is just 1.
16 converts to 91.
18 converts to 81.
19 converts to 61.
Example 2:
Input: 100
Output: 19
Explanation:
The confusing numbers are [6,9,10,16,18,19,60,61,66,68,80,81,86,89,90,91,98,99,100].
Note:
1 <= N <= 10^9
'''
class Solution(object):
result = 0
def confusingNumberII(self, N):
"""
:type N: int
:rtype: int
"""
original_a = [0, 1, 6, 8, 9]
o_rotation = [0, 1, 9, 8, 6]
def recursive(original, rotation, digit, N):
if original > N:
return
if original and original != rotation:
self.result += 1
start = original == 0
if digit >= 1000000000:
return
for index in range(start, 5):
recursive(original * 10 + original_a[index], rotation + o_rotation[index]*digit, digit*10, N)
recursive(0, 0, 1, N)
if (N == 1000000000):
self.result += 1
return self.result