vote up 190 vote down star
81

A question I got on my last interview:

Design a function f, such that:

f(f(n)) == -n

Where n is a 32 bit signed integer; you can't use complex numbers arithmetic.

If you can't design such a function for the whole range of numbers, design it for the largest range possible.

Any ideas?

flag
19  
+1: Nothing wrong with this question, not sure why it was downvoted or has close votes. – Juliet Apr 8 at 21:13
3  
Apparently there are people who think that maths is not programming related. – DrJokepu Apr 8 at 21:14
13  
Or offensive? Does that button mean "I can't figure it out" now? – 1800 INFORMATION Apr 8 at 21:14
35  
public int f(int n) { throw new NotImplementException("You get the rest of the code when you give me a job."); } – Juliet Apr 8 at 21:21
40  
What a terrible interview question. – Daniel Daranas Apr 9 at 9:40
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79 Answers

1 2 3 next
vote up 114 vote down check

This works for any integer or long in Python:

def f(n): 
    if n == 0: return 0
    if n >= 0:
        if n % 2 == 1: 
            return n + 1
        else: 
            return -1 * (n - 1)
    else:
        if n % 2 == 1:
            return n - 1
        else:
            return -1 * (n + 1)

Python automatically promotes integers to arbitrary length longs. In other languages the largest positive integer will overflow, so it will work for all integers except that one.


Similar solution in C# (works for any double, except in overflow situations):

static double F(double n)
{
    if (n == 0) return 0;

    if (n < 0)
    	return ((long)Math.Ceiling(n) % 2 == 0) ? (n + 1) : (-1 * (n - 1));
    else
    	return ((long)Math.Floor(n) % 2 == 0) ? (n - 1) : (-1 * (n + 1));
}
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1  
Broken for -1, because -1 * 0 is still 0 – Joel Coehoorn Apr 8 at 21:25
1  
It is broken for 1 however. f(1) = 0. f(0) = 1 – 1800 INFORMATION Apr 8 at 21:35
4  
Hmm, saving state with even and odd numbers, I should've thought of that. – Unknown Apr 8 at 22:25
7  
I think the most important thing is not the actual function (there are infinitely many solutions), but the process by which you can construct such a function. – Eduardo León Apr 13 at 2:39
1  
It works for all values but 2^(n - 1) - 1 if you use n bit integers. It works for n = 1: 1 => 2 [= 1 + 1] => -1 [= -1 * (2 - 1)]. – Daniel Brückner May 6 at 17:41
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vote up 25 vote down

This is true for all negative numbers.

    f(n) = abs(n)

Because there is one more negative number than there are positive numbers for twos complement integers, f(n) = abs(n) is valid for one more case than f(n) = n > 0 ? -n : n solution that is the same same as f(n) = -abs(n). Got you by one ... :D

UPDATE

No, it is not valid for one case more as I just recognized by litb's comment ... abs(Int.Min) will just overflow ...

I thought about using mod 2 information, too, but concluded, it does not work ... to early. If done right, it will work for all numbers except Int.Min because this will overflow.

UPDATE

I played with it for a while, looking for a nice bit manipulation trick, but I could not find a nice one-liner, while the mod 2 solution fits in one.

    f(n) = 2n(abs(n) % 2) - n + sgn(n)

In C#, this becomes the following:

public static Int32 f(Int32 n)
{
    return 2 * n * (Math.Abs(n) % 2) - n + Math.Sign(n);
}

To get it working for all values, you have to replace Math.Abs() with (n > 0) ? +n : -n and include the calculation in an unchecked block. Then you get even Int.Min mapped to itself as unchecked negation does.

UPDATE

Inspired by another answer I am going to explain how the function works and how to construct such a function.

Lets start at the very beginning. The function f is repeatedly applied to a given value n yielding a sequence of values.

    n => f(n) => f(f(n)) => f(f(f(n))) => f(f(f(f(n)))) => ...

The question demands f(f(n)) = -n, that is two successive applications of f negate the argument. Two further applications of f - four in total - negate the argument again yielding n again.

    n => f(n) => -n => f(f(f(n))) => n => f(n) => ...

Now there is a obvious cycle of length four. Substituting x = f(n) and noting that the obtained equation f(f(f(n))) = f(f(x)) = -x holds, yields the following.

    n => x => -n => -x => n => ...

So we get a cycle of length four with two numbers and the two numbers negated. If you imagine the cycle as a rectangle, negated values are located at opposite corners.

One of many solution to construct such a cycle is the following starting from n.

 n                 => negate and subtract one
-n - 1 = -(n + 1)  => add one
-n                 => negate and add one
 n + 1             => subtract one
 n

A concrete example is of such an cycle is +1 => -2 => -1 => +2 => +1. We are almost done. Noting that the constructed cycle contains an odd positive number, its even successor, and both numbers negate, we can easily partition the integers into many such cycles (2^32 is a multiple of four) and have found a function that satisfies the conditions.

But we have a problem with zero. The cycle must contain 0 => x => 0 because zero is negated to itself. And because the cycle states already 0 => x it follows 0 => x => 0 => x. This is only a cycle of length two and x is turned into itself after two applications, not into -x. Luckily there is one case that solves the problem. If X equals zero we obtain a cycle of length one containing only zero and we solved that problem concluding that zero is a fixed point of f.

Done? Almost. We have 2^32 numbers, zero is a fixed point leaving 2^32 - 1 numbers, and we must partition that number into cycles of four numbers. Bad that 2^32 - 1 is not a multiple of four - there will remain three numbers not in any cycle of length four.

I will explain the remaining part of the solution using the smaller set of 3 bit signed itegers ranging from -4 to +3. We are done with zero. We have one complete cycle +1 => -2 => -1 => +2 => +1. Now let us construct the cycle starting at +3.

    +3 => -4 => -3 => +4 => +3

The problem that arises is that +4 is not representable as 3 bit integer. We would obtain +4 by negating -3 to +3 - what is still a valid 3 bit integer - but then adding one to +3 (binary 011) yields 100 binary. Interpreted as unsigned integer it is +4 but we have to interpret it as signed integer -4. So actually -4 for this example or Int.MinValue in the general case is a second fixed point of integer arithmetic negation - 0 and Int.MinValue are mapped to themselve. So the cycle is actually as follows.

    +3 =>    -4 => -3 => -4 => -3

It is a cycle of length two and additionally +3 enters the cycle via -4. In consequence -4 is correctly mapped to itself after two function applications, +3 is correctly mapped to -3 after two function applications, but -3 is erroneously mapped to itself after two function applications.

So we constructed a function that works for all integers but one. Can we do better? No, we cannot. Why? We have to construct cycles of length four and are able to cover the whole integer range up to four values. The remaining values are the two fixed points 0 and Int.MinValue that must be mapped to themselves and two arbitrary integers x and -x that must be mapped to each other by two function applications.

To map x to -x and vice versa they must form a four cycle and they must be located at opposite corners of that cycle. In consequence 0 and Int.MinValue have to be at opposite corners, too. This will correctly map x and -x but swap the two fixed points 0 and Int.MinValue after two function applications and leave us with two failing inputs. So it is not possible to construct a function that works for all values, but we have one that works for all values except one and this is the best we can achieve.

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vote up 59 vote down

ORIGINAL ANSWER

for all positive numbers,

f(n)
{
   if (n > 0)
   {
      return -n;
   }
   return n;
}

EDIT Based off of comments, it seems that users think this answer is absolutely wrong and flagrantly bad. While I would say that it's partial (as i stated above when i originally posted it), considering the question it's both valid and correct. But to give something that is complete here's one that will work for everything except the negative max int or 0x40000000:

int ffx(int x)
{
    uint y = 0xC0000000 & (uint)x;

    const uint a = 0;
    const uint b = 0x40000000;
    const uint c = 0x80000000;
    const uint d = 0xC0000000;

    switch (y)
    {
        case a:
            return x + (int)b;
        case b:
            return -(x - (int)b);
        case c:
            return -(x + (int)b);
        case d:
            return x - (int)b;
    }
    return 0;
}

hopefully this will at least satisfy those who believe this answer isn't worth the space it takes up ;)

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12  
Hang on. At first I didn't catch that this doesn't work for negative numbers. – JohnFx Apr 8 at 21:23
9  
This function does f(n) == -n and f(f(n)) == n You need a function that makes an integer negative when applied twice. – Mendelt Apr 20 at 14:07
9  
@Mendelt: Huh? This function will turn positive input negative and do nothing if the input is already negative. Therefore, it will never return a positive number and is the simplest ( and most obvious ) solution. – Ed Swangren May 10 at 3:22
8  
This is absolutely wrong! How can it have 55 upvotes?! – superjoe30 Jul 19 at 1:55
4  
This answer is so flagrantly bad that the author, Mark Snyowiec, should delete it. – Stu Thompson Jul 26 at 9:17
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vote up 28 vote down

Depending on your platform, some languages allow you to keep state in the function. VB.Net, for example:

Function f(ByVal n As Integer) As Integer
    Static flag As Integer = -1
    flag *= -1

    Return n * flag
End Function

IIRC, C++ allowed this as well. I suspect they're looking for a different solution though.

Another idea is that since they didn't define the result of the first call to the function you could use odd/evenness to control whether to invert the sign:

int f(int n)
{
   int sign = n>=0?1:-1;
   if (abs(n)%2 == 0)
      return ((abs(n)+1)*sign * -1;
   else
      return (abs(n)-1)*sign;
}

Add one to the magnitude of all even numbers, subtract one from the magnitude of all odd numbers. The result of two calls has the same magnitude, but the one call where it's even we swap the sign. There are some cases where this won't work (-1, max or min int), but it works a lot better than anything else suggested so far.

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1  
I believe it does work for MAX_INT since that's always odd. It doesn't work for MIN_INT and -1. – Airsource Ltd May 5 at 13:22
1  
It's not a function if it has side effects. – nos Aug 7 at 16:47
2  
That may be true in math, but it's irrelevant in programming. So the question is whether they're looking for a mathematical solution or a programming solution. But given that it's for a programming job... – Kyralessa Aug 26 at 20:47
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vote up 5 vote down

I could imagine using the 31st bit as an imaginary (i) bit would be an approach that would support half the total range.

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1  
@1800 INFORMATION: On the other hand, the domain [-2^30+1, 2^30-1] is contiguous which is more appealing from a mathematical point of view. – Jochen Walter Apr 9 at 11:19
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vote up 4 vote down

works for n= [0 .. 2^31-1]

int f(int n) {
  if (n & (1 << 31)) // highest bit set?
    return -(n & ~(1 << 31)); // return negative of original n
  else
    return n | (1 << 31); // return n with highest bit set
}
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1  
Does not work for negative numbers. – BillyONeal Aug 12 at 0:45
vote up 20 vote down

The question doesn't say anything about what the input type and return value of the function f have to be (at least not the way you've presented it)...

...just that when n is a 32-bit integer then f(f(n)) = -n

So, how about something like

Int64 f(Int64 n)
{
    return(n > Int32.MaxValue ? 
        -(n - 4L * Int32.MaxValue):
        n + 4L * Int32.MaxValue);
}

If n is a 32-bit integer then the statement f(f(n)) == -n will be true.

Obviously, this approach could be extended to work for an even wider range of numbers...

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1  
Sneaky. Character limit. – d03boy Apr 8 at 21:49
1  
Yeah, I was working on a similar approach. You beat me to it though. +1 :) – jalf Apr 8 at 21:57
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vote up 0 vote down

Doesn't fail on MIN_INT:

int f(n) { return n < 0 ? -abs(n + 1) : -(abs(n) + 1); }
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vote up -1 vote down
f(n) { return -1 * abs(n) }

How can I handle overflow problems with this? Or am I missing the point?

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1  
Given the requirements of the question, that's probably an adequate response. It doesn't say that f(n) has to return a different value. The question is a puzzle, so you look for the exploits (loopholes) that would make a feasible solution. – JasonTrue Apr 8 at 22:14
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vote up 129 vote down

You didn't say what kind of language they expected... Here's a static solution (haskell). It's basically messing with the 2 most significant bits:

f :: Int -> Int
f x | (testBit x 30 /= testBit x 31) = negate $ complementBit x 30
    | otherwise = complementBit x 30

It's much easier in a dynamic language (python). Just check if the argument is a number X and return a lambda that returns -X:

def f(x):
   if isinstance(x,int):
      return (lambda: -x)
   else:
      return x()
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15  
+1 for the lambda idea – Gabe Moothart Apr 8 at 22:11
1  
Agreed, that was clever. – GMan Apr 8 at 22:54
2  
Cool, I love this... the same approach in JavaScript: var f = function(n) { return (typeof n == 'function') ? n() : function() { return -n; } } – Mark Renouf Apr 9 at 2:17
22  
Damn dirty trick. +1 – Norman Ramsey Apr 10 at 2:29
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vote up 15 vote down

for javascript (or other dynamically typed languages) you can have the function accept either an int or an object and return the other. i.e.

function f(n) {
    if (n.passed) {
        return -n.val;
    } else {
        return {val:n, passed:1};
    }
}

giving

js> f(f(10))  
-10
js> f(f(-10))
10

alternatively you could use overloading in a strongly typed language although that may break the rules ie

int f(long n) {
    return n;
}

long f(int n) {
    return -n;
}
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vote up 11 vote down

For all 32-bit values (with the caveat that -0 is -2147483648)

int rotate(int x)
{
    static const int split = INT_MAX / 2 + 1;
    static const int negativeSplit = INT_MIN / 2 + 1;

    if (x == INT_MAX)
    	return INT_MIN;
    if (x == INT_MIN)
    	return x + 1;

    if (x >= split)
    	return x + 1 - INT_MIN;
    if (x >= 0)
    	return INT_MAX - x;
    if (x >= negativeSplit)
    	return INT_MIN - x + 1;
    return split -(negativeSplit - x);
}

You basically need to pair each -x => x => -x loop with a y => -y => y loop. So I paired up opposite sides of the split.

e.g. For 4 bit integers:

0 => 7 => -8 => -7 => 0
1 => 6 => -1 => -6 => 1
2 => 5 => -2 => -5 => 2
3 => 4 => -3 => -4 => 3
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vote up 0 vote down

The problem as stated doesn't require that the function must ONLY accept 32 bit ints, only that n, as given, is a 32-bit int.

Ruby:

def f( n )
  return 0 unless n != 0 
  ( n == n.to_i ) ? 1.0 / n : -(n**-1).to_i
end
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vote up 1 vote down

This will work in a very broad range of numbers:

    static int f(int n)
    {
        int lastBit = int.MaxValue;
        lastBit++;
        int secondLastBit = lastBit >> 1;
        int tuple = lastBit | secondLastBit;
        if ((n & tuple) == tuple)
            return n + lastBit;
        if ((n & tuple) == 0)
            return n + lastBit;
        return -(n + lastBit);
    }

My initial approach was to use the last bit as a check bit to know where we'd be in the first or the second call. Basically, I'd place this bit to 1 after the first call to signal the second call the first had already passed. But, this approach was defeated by negative numbers whose last bit already arrives at 1 during the first call.

The same theory applies to the second last bit for most negative numbers. But, what usually happens is that most of the times, the last and second last bits are the same. Either they are both 1 for negative numbers or they are both 0 for positive numbers.

So my final approach is to check whether they are either both 1 or both 0, meaning that for most cases this is the first call. If the last bit is different from the second last bit, then I assume we are at the second call, and simply re-invert the last bit. Obviously this doesn't work for very big numbers that use those two last bits. But, once again, it works for a very wide range of numbers.

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vote up 6 vote down

C# for a range of 2^32 - 1 numbers, all int32 numbers except (Int32.MinValue)

    Func<int, int> f = n =>
        n < 0
           ? (n & (1 << 30)) == (1 << 30) ? (n ^ (1 << 30)) : - (n | (1 << 30))
           : (n & (1 << 30)) == (1 << 30) ? -(n ^ (1 << 30)) : (n | (1 << 30));

    Console.WriteLine(f(f(Int32.MinValue + 1))); // -2147483648 + 1
    for (int i = -3; i <= 3  ; i++)
        Console.WriteLine(f(f(i)));
    Console.WriteLine(f(f(Int32.MaxValue))); // 2147483647

prints:

2147483647
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
-2147483647
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vote up 3 vote down

:D

boolean inner = true;

int f(int input) {
   if(inner) {
      inner = false;
      return input;
   } else {
      inner = true;
      return -input;
   }
}
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vote up 6 vote down

Essentially the function has to divide the available range into cycles of size 4, with -n at the opposite end of n's cycle. However, 0 must be part of a cycle of size 1, because otherwise 0->x->0->x != -x. Because of 0 being alone, there must be 3 other values in our range (whose size is a multiple of 4) not in a proper cycle with 4 elements.

I chose these extra weird values to be MIN_INT, MAX_INT, and MIN_INT+1. Furthermore, MIN_INT+1 will map to MAX_INT correctly, but get stuck there and not map back. I think this is the best compromise, because it has the nice property of only the extreme values not working correctly. Also, it means it would work for all BigInts.

int f(int n):
    if n == 0 or n == MIN_INT or n == MAX_INT: return n
    return ((Math.abs(n) mod 2) * 2 - 1) * n + Math.sign(n)
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vote up 0 vote down

A bizarre and only slightly-clever solution in Scala using implicit conversions:

sealed trait IntWrapper {
  val n: Int
}

case class First(n: Int) extends IntWrapper
case class Second(n: Int) extends IntWrapper
case class Last(n: Int) extends IntWrapper

implicit def int2wrapper(n: Int) = First(n)
implicit def wrapper2int(w: IntWrapper) = w.n

def f(n: IntWrapper) = n match {
  case First(x) => Second(x)
  case Second(x) => Final(-x)
}

I don't think that's quite the right idea though.

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vote up 2 vote down

In PHP

function f($n) {
    if(is_int($n)) {
        return (string)$n;
    }
    else {
        return (int)$n * (-1);
    }
}

I'm sure you can understand the spirit of this method for other languages. I explicitly casted back to int to make it more clear for people who don't use weakly typed languages. You'd have to overload the function for some languages.

The neat thing about this solution is it works whether you start with a string or an integer, and doesn't visibly change anything when returning f(n).

In my opinion, the interviewer is asking, "does this candidate know how to flag data to be operated on later," and, "does this candidate know how to flag data while least altering it?" You can do this with doubles, strings, or any other data type you feel like casting.

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vote up -2 vote down

Seems easy enough.

<script type="text/javascript">
function f(n){
    if (typeof n === "string") {
        return parseInt(n, 10)
    }
    return (-n).toString(10);
}

alert(f(f(1)));
</script>
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1  
It specifically states "where n is a signed 32 bit int", not a string – joshcomley May 30 at 15:32
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vote up 13 vote down

A C++ version, probably bending the rules somewhat but works for all numeric types (floats, ints, doubles) and even class types that overload the unary minus:

template <class T>
struct f_result
{
  T value;
};

template <class T>
f_result <T> f (T n)
{
  f_result <T> result = {n};
  return result;
}

template <class T>
T f (f_result <T> n)
{
  return -n.value;
}

void main (void)
{
  int n = 45;
  cout << "f(f(" << n << ")) = " << f(f(n)) << endl;
  float p = 3.14f;
  cout << "f(f(" << p << ")) = " << f(f(p)) << endl;
}

Skizz

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vote up 44 vote down

Or, you could abuse the preprocessor:

#define f(n) (f##n)
#define ff(n) -n

void main (void)
{
  int n = -42;
  cout << "f(f(" << n << ")) = " << f(f(n)) << endl;
}

Skizz

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13  
+1, really cool; but the void main really makes my eyes bleed. – Konrad Rudolph Apr 9 at 16:13
13  
@Skizz, return 0 from main isn't required in c++ even with int return value... so by doing it right you actually type one less character! – Dan Olson Apr 10 at 9:49
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vote up 8 vote down

Uses globals...but so?

bool done = false
f(int n)
{
  int out = n;
  if(!done)
  {  
      out = n * -1;
      done = true;
   }
   return out;
}
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2  
Not sure that this was the intention of the question asker, but +1 for "thinking out of the box". – Liran Orevi May 4 at 15:40
1  
Instead of conditionally saying "done = true", you should always say "done = !done", that way your function can be used more than once. – Chris Lutz Jul 27 at 5:27
vote up -3 vote down

How about

int f(int n)
{
    return -abs(n);
}
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vote up 3 vote down
return x ^ ((x%2) ? 1 : -INT_MAX);
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vote up 19 vote down

Using complex numbers, you can effectively divide the task of negating a number into two steps:

  • multiply n by i, and you get n*i, which is n rotated 90° counter-clockwise
  • multiply again by i, and you get -n

The great thing is that you don't need any special handling code. Just multiplying by i does the job.

But you're not allowed to use complex numbers. So you have to somehow create your own imaginary axis, using part of your data range. Since you need exactly as much imaginary (intermediate) values as initial values, you are left with only half the data range.

I tried to visualize this on the following figure, assuming signed 8-bit data. You would have to scale this for 32-bit integers. The allowed range for initial n is -64 to +63. Here's what the function does for positive n:

  • If n is in 0..63 (initial range), the function call adds 64, mapping n to the range 64..127 (intermediate range)
  • If n is in 64..127 (intermediate range), the function subtracts n from 64, mapping n to the range 0..-63

For negative n, the function uses the intermediate range -65..-128.

alt text

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2  
@geschema, what tool did you use to create those nice graphics? – jwfearn Apr 12 at 17:24
2  
Sorry, the question says explicitly no complex numbers. – Rui Craveiro Apr 13 at 18:54
5  
@Liran: I used OmniGraffle (Mac-only) – geschema May 5 at 10:40
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vote up -1 vote down

int32_t f(int32_t n) { return -2147483648 == n ? n : n < 0 ? n : -n; }

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vote up 29 vote down

Thanks to overloading in C++ :

double f(int var)
{
 return double(var);
} 

int f(double var)
{
 return -int(var);
}

int main(){
int n(42);
std::cout<<f(f(n));
}
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1  
Unfortunately, because of name mangling, the functions you call "f" actually have weirder names. – Eduardo León Apr 11 at 2:28
3  
ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT!!!!!!! Also works in C#. :-D – Rui Craveiro Apr 13 at 18:55
2  
technically... this is not what the question demands. you defined 2 f() functions, f(int) and f(float) and the questions asks "Design a function f() ... " – elcuco Aug 25 at 20:49
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vote up 8 vote down

I'm not actually trying to give a solution to the problem itself, but do have a couple of comments, as the question states this problem was posed was part of a (job?) interview:

  • I would first ask "Why would such a function be needed? What is the bigger problem this is part of?" instead of trying to solve the actual posed problem on the spot. This shows how I think and how I tackle problems like this. Who know? That might even be the actual reason the question is asked in an interview in the first place. If the answer is "Never you mind, assume it's needed, and show me how you would design this function." I would then continue to do so.
  • Then, I would write the C# test case code I would use (the obvious: loop from int.MinValue to int.MaxValue, and for each n in that range call f(f(n)) and checking the result is -n), telling I would then use Test Driven Development to get to such a function.
  • Only if the interviewer continues asking for me to solve the posed problem would I actually start to try and scribble pseudocode during the interview itself to try and get to some sort of an answer. However, I don't really think I would be jumping to take the job if the interviewer would be any indication of what the company is like...

Oh, this answer assumes the interview was for a C# programming related position. Would of course be a silly answer if the interview was for a math related position. ;-)

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vote up -2 vote down

Perhaps cheating? (python)

def f(n):    
    if isinstance(n, list):
        return -n[0]
    else:
        return [n,0]    
n = 4
print f(f(n))

--output--
-4
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