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Home/ Questions/Q 334969
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T10:06:18+00:00 2026-05-12T10:06:18+00:00

Given a randomly distributed set of keys, with each key mapped to a set

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Given a randomly distributed set of keys, with each key mapped to a set of values, how would you transform it into multiple trees?

Example Data Set

  • NB2 => {NC2 ND2}
  • ND1 => {NG1 NH1}
  • NA1 => {NB1}
  • NB1 => {NC1 ND1 NE1}
  • NA2 => {NB2}
  • NC1 => {NF1}
  • NE1 => {NI1 NJ1 NK1}

Resulting Tree for NA1

NA1
`-- NB1
    |-- NC1
    |   `-- NF1
    |-- ND1
    |   |-- NG1
    |   `-- NH1
    `-- NE1
        |-- NI1
        |-- NJ1
        `-- NK1

Resulting Tree for NA2

NA2
`-- NB2
    |-- NC2
    `-- ND2
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T10:06:18+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 10:06 am

    I’m not aware of any library methods that will do this transformation. Here’s how I’d do it. It’s pretty straightforward, IMO.

    public class Tree {
        public Tree(String key) {
            // ...
        }
        public void addChild(Tree child) {
            // ...
        }
    }
    
    public Set<Tree> transform(Map<String, List<String>> input) {
        // Potential tree roots.  We start with all LHS keys as potential roots,
        // and eliminate them when we see their keys on the RHS.
        Set<String> roots = new HashSet<String>(input.keySet());
    
        // This map associates keys with the tree nodes that we create for them
        Map<String, Tree> map = new HashMap<String, Tree>();
    
        for (Map.Entry<String, List<String>> entry : input.entrySet()) {
            String key = entry.getKey();
            List<String> childKeys = entry.getValue();
            Tree tree = map.get(key);
            if (tree == null) {
                tree = new Tree(key);
                map.put(key, tree);
            }
            for (String childKey : childKeys) {
                roots.remove(childKey);
                Tree child = map.get(childKey);
                if (child == null) {
                    child = new Tree(childKey);
                    map.put(childKey, child);
                }
                tree.addChild(child);
            }
        }
        Set<Tree> res = new HashSet<Tree>(roots.size());
        for (String key : roots) {
            res.add(map.get(key));
        }
        return res;
    }
    

    EDIT: Note this algorithm will “work” if the input represents a set of DAGs (Directed Acyclic Graphs). However, I’ve just realized that the resulting a set of trees will share TreeNode instances for any common subtrees in the input data.

    Beware that I haven’t debugged this code 🙂

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