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An n-bit gray code sequence is a sequence of 2n
integers where:
- Every integer is in the inclusive range
[0, 2n - 1]
,
- The first integer is
0
,
- An integer appears no more than once in the sequence,
- The binary representation of every pair of adjacent integers differs by exactly one bit, and
- The binary representation of the first and last integers differs by exactly one bit.
Given an integer n
, return any valid n-bit gray code sequence.
Example 1:
Input: n = 2
Output: [0,1,3,2]
Explanation:
The binary representation of [0,1,3,2] is [00,01,11,10].
- 00 and 01 differ by one bit
- 01 and 11 differ by one bit
- 11 and 10 differ by one bit
- 10 and 00 differ by one bit
[0,2,3,1] is also a valid gray code sequence, whose binary representation is [00,10,11,01].
- 00 and 10 differ by one bit
- 10 and 11 differ by one bit
- 11 and 01 differ by one bit
- 01 and 00 differ by one bit
Example 2:
Input: n = 1
Output: [0,1]
Constraints:
[Bit Manipulation]
[Math]
[Backtracking]
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