2125. GCD Sort of an Array

Hard
Array
Math
Union Find
Sorting
Number Theory

Description

You are given an integer array nums, and you can perform the following operation any number of times on nums:

  • Swap the positions of two elements nums[i] and nums[j] if gcd(nums[i], nums[j]) > 1 where gcd(nums[i], nums[j]) is the greatest common divisor of nums[i] and nums[j].

Return true if it is possible to sort nums in non-decreasing order using the above swap method, or false otherwise.

 

Example 1:

Input: nums = [7,21,3]
Output: true
Explanation: We can sort [7,21,3] by performing the following operations:
- Swap 7 and 21 because gcd(7,21) = 7. nums = [21,7,3]
- Swap 21 and 3 because gcd(21,3) = 3. nums = [3,7,21]

Example 2:

Input: nums = [5,2,6,2]
Output: false
Explanation: It is impossible to sort the array because 5 cannot be swapped with any other element.

Example 3:

Input: nums = [10,5,9,3,15]
Output: true
We can sort [10,5,9,3,15] by performing the following operations:
- Swap 10 and 15 because gcd(10,15) = 5. nums = [15,5,9,3,10]
- Swap 15 and 3 because gcd(15,3) = 3. nums = [3,5,9,15,10]
- Swap 10 and 15 because gcd(10,15) = 5. nums = [3,5,9,10,15]

 

Constraints:

  • 1 <= nums.length <= 3 * 104
  • 2 <= nums[i] <= 105

Hints

Hint 1
Can we build a graph with all the prime numbers and the original array?
Hint 2
We can use union-find to determine which indices are connected (i.e., which indices can be swapped).

Statistics

Acceptance
48.2%
Submissions
27,809
Accepted
13,398