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中文文档

Description

Write a recursive function to multiply two positive integers without using the * operator. You can use addition, subtraction, and bit shifting, but you should minimize the number of those operations.

Example 1:

Input: A = 1, B = 10

Output: 10

Example 2:

Input: A = 3, B = 4

Output: 12

Note:

  1. The result will not overflow.

Solutions

Solution 1: Recursion + Bit Manipulation

First, we check if $B$ is $1$. If it is, we directly return $A$.

Otherwise, we check if $B$ is an odd number. If it is, we can right shift $B$ by one bit, then recursively call the function, and finally left shift the result by one bit and add $A$. If not, we can right shift $B$ by one bit, then recursively call the function, and finally left shift the result by one bit.

The time complexity is $O(\log n)$, and the space complexity is $O(\log n)$. Here, $n$ is the size of $B$.

Python3

class Solution:
    def multiply(self, A: int, B: int) -> int:
        if B == 1:
            return A
        if B & 1:
            return (self.multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1) + A
        return self.multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1

Java

class Solution {
    public int multiply(int A, int B) {
        if (B == 1) {
            return A;
        }
        if ((B & 1) == 1) {
            return (multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1) + A;
        }
        return multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1;
    }
}

C++

class Solution {
public:
    int multiply(int A, int B) {
        if (B == 1) {
            return A;
        }
        if ((B & 1) == 1) {
            return (multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1) + A;
        }
        return multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1;
    }
};

Go

func multiply(A int, B int) int {
	if B == 1 {
		return A
	}
	if B&1 == 1 {
		return (multiply(A, B>>1) << 1) + A
	}
	return multiply(A, B>>1) << 1
}

TypeScript

function multiply(A: number, B: number): number {
    if (B === 1) {
        return A;
    }
    if ((B & 1) === 1) {
        return (multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1) + A;
    }
    return multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1;
}

Rust

impl Solution {
    pub fn multiply(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 {
        if b == 1 {
            return a;
        }
        if (b & 1) == 1 {
            return (Self::multiply(a, b >> 1) << 1) + a;
        }
        Self::multiply(a, b >> 1) << 1
    }
}

Swift

class Solution {
    func multiply(_ A: Int, _ B: Int) -> Int {
        if B == 1 {
            return A
        }
        if (B & 1) == 1 {
            return (multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1) + A
        }
        return multiply(A, B >> 1) << 1
    }
}