Medium
Evaluate the value of an arithmetic expression in Reverse Polish Notation.
Valid operators are +
, -
, *
, and /
. Each operand may be an integer or another expression.
Note that division between two integers should truncate toward zero.
It is guaranteed that the given RPN expression is always valid. That means the expression would always evaluate to a result, and there will not be any division by zero operation.
Example 1:
Input: tokens = [“2”,”1”,”+”,”3”,”*”]
Output: 9
Explanation: ((2 + 1) * 3) = 9
Example 2:
Input: tokens = [“4”,”13”,”5”,”/”,”+”]
Output: 6
Explanation: (4 + (13 / 5)) = 6
Example 3:
Input: tokens = [“10”,”6”,”9”,”3”,”+”,”-11”,”*”,”/”,”*”,”17”,”+”,”5”,”+”]
Output: 22
Explanation:
((10 \* (6 / ((9 + 3) \* -11))) + 17) + 5
= ((10 \* (6 / (12 \* -11))) + 17) + 5
= ((10 \* (6 / -132)) + 17) + 5
= ((10 \* 0) + 17) + 5
= (0 + 17) + 5
= 17 + 5
= 22
Constraints:
1 <= tokens.length <= 104
tokens[i]
is either an operator: "+"
, "-"
, "*"
, or "/"
, or an integer in the range [-200, 200]
.using System.Collections.Generic;
public class Solution {
public int EvalRPN(string[] tokens) {
var st = new Stack<int>();
foreach (string token in tokens) {
if (!char.IsDigit(token[token.Length - 1])) {
int second = st.Pop();
int first = st.Pop();
st.Push(Eval(first, second, token));
} else {
st.Push(int.Parse(token));
}
}
return st.Pop();
}
private int Eval(int first, int second, string op) {
return op switch {
"+" => first + second,
"-" => first - second,
"*" => first * second,
_ => first / second
};
}
}