Given an n-ary tree, return the level order traversal of its nodes’ values.
Nary-Tree input serialization is represented in their level order traversal, each group of children is separated by the null value (See examples).
Example 1:
Input: root = [1,null,3,2,4,null,5,6]
Output: [[1],[3,2,4],[5,6]]
Example 2:
Input: root = [1,null,2,3,4,5,null,null,6,7,null,8,null,9,10,null,null,11,null,12,null,13,null,null,14]
Output: [[1],[2,3,4,5],[6,7,8,9,10],[11,12,13],[14]]
Constraints:
The height of the n-ary tree is less than or equal to 1000
The total number of nodes is between [0, 104]
/*
// Definition for a Node.
class Node {
public:
int val;
vector children;
Node() {}
Node(int _val) {
val = _val;
}
Node(int _val, vector _children) {
val = _val;
children = _children;
}
};
*/
class Solution {
public:
vector<vector<int>> levelOrder(Node* root) {
vector<vector<int>> res;
queue<Node*> q;
if(root != NULL) q.push(root);
while(!q.empty()){
int size = q.size();
vector<int> tmp;
while(size--){
Node* n = q.front();
q.pop();
tmp.push_back(n->val);
vector<Node*> child = n->children;
for(int i = 0;i < child.size();i++){
if(child[i] != NULL) q.push(child[i]);
}
}
res.push_back(tmp);
}
return res;
}
};