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107-easy-Binary_Tree_Level_Order_Traversal_II.js
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107-easy-Binary_Tree_Level_Order_Traversal_II.js
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/**
107. Binary Tree Level Order Traversal II
Given a binary tree, return the bottom-up level order traversal of its nodes' values. (ie, from left to right, level by level from leaf to root).
For example:
Given binary tree [3,9,20,null,null,15,7],
3
/ \
9 20
/ \
15 7
return its bottom-up level order traversal as:
[
[15,7],
[9,20],
[3]
]
*/
/**
* Definition for a binary tree node.
* function TreeNode(val) {
* this.val = val;
* this.left = this.right = null;
* }
*/
/**
* @param {TreeNode} root
* @return {number[][]}
*/
var levelOrderBottom = function (root) {
function traversal(node, list, level) {
if (list[level]) {
list[level].push(node.val);
} else {
list[level] = [node.val];
}
if (node.left) {
traversal(node.left, list, level + 1)
}
if (node.right) {
traversal(node.right, list, level + 1)
}
}
if (!root || root.val === null) {
return [];
}
const list = [];
traversal(root, list, 0);
console.log(list);
return list.filter(item => item).reverse();
};
const tree = {
val: 0,
left: {
val: 2,
left: {
val: 1,
left: {
val: 5,
left: null,
right: null
},
right: {
val: 1,
left: null,
right: null
}
},
right: null
},
right: {
val: 4,
left: {
val: 3,
left: null,
right: {
val: 6,
left: null,
right: null
}
},
right: {
val: -1,
left: null,
right: {
val: 8,
left: null,
right: null
}
}
}
}
console.time('time');
levelOrderBottom(tree);
console.timeEnd('time');