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Unique Email Addresses

Problem

Every valid email consists of a local name and a domain name, separated by the '@' sign. Besides lowercase letters, the email may contain one or more '.' or '+'.

  • For example, in "alice@leetcode.com", "alice" is the local name, and "leetcode.com" is the domain name.

If you add periods '.' between some characters in the local name part of an email address, mail sent there will be forwarded to the same address without dots in the local name. Note that this rule does not apply to domain names.

  • For example, "alice.z@leetcode.com" and "alicez@leetcode.com" forward to the same email address.

If you add a plus '+' in the local name, everything after the first plus sign will be ignored. This allows certain emails to be filtered. Note that this rule does not apply to domain names.

  • For example, "m.y+name@email.com" will be forwarded to "my@email.com".

It is possible to use both of these rules at the same time.

Given an array of strings emails where we send one email to each emails[i], return the number of different addresses that actually receive mails.

 

Example 1:

Input: emails = ["test.email+alex@leetcode.com","test.e.mail+bob.cathy@leetcode.com","testemail+david@lee.tcode.com"]
Output: 2
Explanation: "testemail@leetcode.com" and "testemail@lee.tcode.com" actually receive mails.

Example 2:

Input: emails = ["a@leetcode.com","b@leetcode.com","c@leetcode.com"]
Output: 3

 

Constraints:

  • 1 <= emails.length <= 100
  • 1 <= emails[i].length <= 100
  • emails[i] consist of lowercase English letters, '+', '.' and '@'.
  • Each emails[i] contains exactly one '@' character.
  • All local and domain names are non-empty.
  • Local names do not start with a '+' character.
  • Domain names end with the ".com" suffix.

Solution

/**
* @param {string[]} emails
* @return {number}
*/
var numUniqueEmails = function(emails) {
const set = {}; // track unique emails
let count = 0; // number of emails in set

for (const email of emails) {
const split = email.split("@");
const local = split[0].split("+", 1)[0].replaceAll(".", "");
const domain = split[1];
const parsed = `${local}@${domain}`;
if (!(parsed in set)) { // new unique email
set[parsed] = true;
count++;
}
}
return count;
};

We iterate through emails and parse each email as per the provided rules. Next, we check if our parsed email has been encountered before, if not then we store it in set and increment count.