Implement a MyCalendarThree
class to store your events. A new event can always be added.
Your class will have one method, book(int start, int end)
. Formally, this represents a booking on the half open interval [start, end)
, the range of real numbers x
such that start <= x < end
.
A K-booking happens when K events have some non-empty intersection (ie., there is some time that is common to all K events.)
For each call to the method MyCalendar.book
, return an integer K
representing the largest integer such that there exists a K
-booking in the calendar.
Your class will be called like this: MyCalendarThree cal = new MyCalendarThree();
MyCalendarThree.book(start, end)
Example 1:
MyCalendarThree(); MyCalendarThree.book(10, 20); // returns 1 MyCalendarThree.book(50, 60); // returns 1 MyCalendarThree.book(10, 40); // returns 2 MyCalendarThree.book(5, 15); // returns 3 MyCalendarThree.book(5, 10); // returns 3 MyCalendarThree.book(25, 55); // returns 3 Explanation: The first two events can be booked and are disjoint, so the maximum K-booking is a 1-booking. The third event [10, 40) intersects the first event, and the maximum K-booking is a 2-booking. The remaining events cause the maximum K-booking to be only a 3-booking. Note that the last event locally causes a 2-booking, but the answer is still 3 because eg. [10, 20), [10, 40), and [5, 15) are still triple booked.
Note:
<li>The number of calls to <code>MyCalendarThree.book</code> per test case will be at most <code>400</code>.</li>
<li>In calls to <code>MyCalendarThree.book(start, end)</code>, <code>start</code> and <code>end</code> are integers in the range <code>[0, 10^9]</code>.</li>