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say hello world with C++ - Solution in Hacker Rank - hackerranksolutions8

  Objective This is a simple challenge to help you practice printing to  stdout . You may also want to complete  Solve Me First  in C++ before attempting this challenge. We’re starting out by printing the most famous computing phrase of all time! In the editor below, use either  printf  or  cout  to print the string  Hello ,World!  to  stdout . The more popular command form is  cout . It has the following basic form: cout<<value_to_print<<value_to_print; Any number of values can be printed using one command as shown. The  printf  command comes from C language. It accepts an optional format specification and a list of variables. Two examples for printing a string are: printf("%s", string);   printf(string); Note that neither method adds a newline. It only prints what you tell it to. Output Format Print   Hello ,World!   to stdout. Sample Output Hello, World! Solution:- //Say Hello, ...

Java Regex 2 – Duplicate Words HackerRank Java Solution

 Problem:-

In this challenge, we use regular expressions (RegEx) to remove instances of words that are repeated more than once, but retain the first occurrence of any case-insensitive repeated word. For example, the words love and to are repeated in the sentence I love Love to To tO code. Can you complete the code in the editor so it will turn I love Love to To tO codeinto I love to code?To solve this challenge, complete the following three lines:

  1. Write a RegEx that will match any repeated word.
  2. Complete the second compile argument so that the compiled RegEx is case-insensitive.
  3. Write the two necessary arguments for replaceAll such that each repeated word is replaced with the very first instance the word found in the sentence. It must be the exact first occurrence of the word, as the expected output is case-sensitive.

Note: This challenge uses a custom checker; you will fail the challenge if you modify anything other than the three locations that the comments direct you to complete. To restore the editor’s original stub code, create a new buffer by clicking on the branch icon in the top left of the editor.Input FormatThe following input is handled for you the given stub code:The first line contains an integer, , denoting the number of sentences. 
Each of the  subsequent lines contains a single sentence consisting of English alphabetic letters and whitespace characters.Constraints

  • Each sentence consists of at most  English alphabetic letters and whitespaces.

Output FormatStub code in the editor prints the sentence modified by the replaceAll line to stdout. The modified string must be a modified version of the initial sentence where all repeat occurrences of each word are removed.Sample Input

5
Goodbye bye bye world world world
Sam went went to to to his business
Reya is is the the best player in eye eye game
in inthe
Hello hello Ab aB

Sample Output

Goodbye bye world
Sam went to his business
Reya is the best player in eye game
in inthe
Hello Ab

Explanation

  1. We remove the second occurrence of bye and the second and third occurrences of world from Goodbye bye bye world world world to get Goodbye bye world.
  2. We remove the second occurrence of went and the second and third occurrences of to from Sam went went to to to his business to get Sam went to his business.
  3. We remove the second occurrence of is, the second occurrence of the, and the second occurrence of eye from Reya is is the the best player in eye eye game to get Reya is the best player in eye game.
  4. The sentence in inthe has no repeated words, so we do not modify it.
  5. We remove the second occurrence of ab from Hello hello Ab aB to get Hello Ab. It’s important to note that our matching is case-insensitive, and we specifically retained the first occurrence of the matched word in our final string.

Solution:-

import java.util.Scanner;


import java.util.regex.Matcher;


import java.util.regex.Pattern;



public class DuplicateWords {



    public static void main(String[] args) {



       String regex = "\\b(\\w+)(?:\\W+\\1\\b)+";


        Pattern p = Pattern.compile(regex, Pattern.CASE_INSENSITIVE);



        Scanner in = new Scanner(System.in);


        int numSentences = Integer.parseInt(in.nextLine());


        


        while (numSentences-- > 0) {


            String input = in.nextLine();


            


            Matcher m = p.matcher(input);


            


            // Check for subsequences of input that match the compiled pattern


            while (m.find()) {


                input = input.replaceAll(m.group(), m.group(1));


            }


            


            // Prints the modified sentence.


            System.out.println(input);


        }


        


        in.close();


}


}

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