The count-and-say sequence is the sequence of integers with the first five terms as following:
1. 1
2. 11
3. 21
4. 1211
5. 111221
1
is read off as "one 1"
or 11
.
11
is read off as "two 1s"
or 21
.
21
is read off as "one 2
, then one 1"
or 1211
.
Given an integer n where 1 ≤ n ≤ 30, generate the nth term of the count-and-say sequence. You can do so recursively, in other words from the previous member read off the digits, counting the number of digits in groups of the same digit.
Note: Each term of the sequence of integers will be represented as a string.
Input: 1
Output: "1"
Explanation: This is the base case.
Input: 4
Output: "1211"
Explanation: For n = 3 the term was "21" in which we have two groups "2" and "1", "2" can be read as "12" which means frequency = 1 and value = 2, the same way "1" is read as "11", so the answer is the concatenation of "12" and "11" which is "1211".
/**
* @param {number} n
* @return {string}
*/
var countAndSay = function(n) {
var W = ['1','1','11','21','1211','111221'];
for (var i = 6; i<=n; i++){
var pre = W[i-1];
var count = 1;
var current = '';
for(var j = 1; j<= pre.length-1; j++){
if(pre[j] == pre[j-1]){
count ++;
}else{
current += count;
current += pre[j-1];
count = 1;
}
}
current += count;
current += pre[pre.length-1];
W[i] = current;
}
return W[n]
};