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:
'/'
.'/'
.'/'
.'.'
or double period '..'
)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:
1 <= path.length <= 3000
path
consists of English letters, digits, period '.'
, slash '/'
or '_'
.path
is a valid absolute Unix path.function simplifyPath(path: string): string {
const stack = []
const mod = path.split('/').filter((element) => element.length)
for (const element of mod) {
if (element === '..') {
stack.pop()
} else if (element === '.') {
continue
} else {
stack.push(element)
}
}
return '/'.concat(stack.join('/'))
}
export { simplifyPath }