LeetCode Top Interview 150

71. Simplify Path

Medium

Given a string path, which is an absolute path (starting with a slash '/') to a file or directory in a Unix-style file system, convert it to the simplified canonical path.

In a Unix-style file system, a period '.' refers to the current directory, a double period '..' refers to the directory up a level, and any multiple consecutive slashes (i.e. '//') are treated as a single slash '/'. For this problem, any other format of periods such as '...' are treated as file/directory names.

The canonical path should have the following format:

Return the simplified canonical path.

Example 1:

Input: path = “/home/”

Output: “/home”

Explanation: Note that there is no trailing slash after the last directory name.

Example 2:

Input: path = “/../”

Output: “/”

Explanation: Going one level up from the root directory is a no-op, as the root level is the highest level you can go.

Example 3:

Input: path = “/home//foo/”

Output: “/home/foo”

Explanation: In the canonical path, multiple consecutive slashes are replaced by a single one.

Example 4:

Input: path = “/a/./b/../../c/”

Output: “/c”

Constraints:

Solution

class Solution:
    def simplifyPath(self, path: str) -> str:
        parts = path.split('/')
        stack = []

        for p in parts:
            if(p=='' or p=='.'):
                continue
            elif(p=='..'):
                if stack:
                    stack.pop()
            else:
                stack.append(p)

        return '/'+'/'.join(stack)