freeCodeCamp/curriculum/challenges/english/08-coding-interview-prep/project-euler/problem-24-lexicographic-pe...

1.9 KiB

id challengeType title
5900f3841000cf542c50fe97 5 Problem 24: Lexicographic permutations

Description

A permutation is an ordered arrangement of objects. For example, 3124 is one possible permutation of the digits 1, 2, 3 and 4. If all of the permutations are listed numerically or alphabetically, we call it lexicographic order. The lexicographic permutations of 0, 1 and 2 are:
012   021   102   120   201   210
What is the nth lexicographic permutation of the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9?

Instructions

Tests

tests:
  - text: <code>lexicographicPermutations(699999)</code> should return 1938246570.
    testString: assert(lexicographicPermutations(699999) == 1938246570, '<code>lexicographicPermutations(699999)</code> should return 1938246570.');
  - text: <code>lexicographicPermutations(899999)</code> should return 2536987410.
    testString: assert(lexicographicPermutations(899999) == 2536987410, '<code>lexicographicPermutations(899999)</code> should return 2536987410.');
  - text: <code>lexicographicPermutations(900000)</code> should return 2537014689.
    testString: assert(lexicographicPermutations(900000) == 2537014689, '<code>lexicographicPermutations(900000)</code> should return 2537014689.');
  - text: <code>lexicographicPermutations(999999)</code> should return 2783915460.
    testString: assert(lexicographicPermutations(999999) == 2783915460, '<code>lexicographicPermutations(999999)</code> should return 2783915460.');

Challenge Seed

function lexicographicPermutations(n) {
  // Good luck!
  return n;
}

lexicographicPermutations(999999);

Solution

// solution required