"""
author: Aayush Soni
Given n pairs of parentheses, write a function to generate all
combinations of well-formed parentheses.
Input: n = 2
Output: ["(())","()()"]
Leetcode link: https://leetcode.com/problems/generate-parentheses/description/
"""
def backtrack(
partial: str, open_count: int, close_count: int, n: int, result: list[str]
) -> None:
"""
Generate valid combinations of balanced parentheses using recursion.
:param partial: A string representing the current combination.
:param open_count: An integer representing the count of open parentheses.
:param close_count: An integer representing the count of close parentheses.
:param n: An integer representing the total number of pairs.
:param result: A list to store valid combinations.
:return: None
This function uses recursion to explore all possible combinations,
ensuring that at each step, the parentheses remain balanced.
Example:
>>> result = []
>>> backtrack("", 0, 0, 2, result)
>>> result
['(())', '()()']
"""
if len(partial) == 2 * n:
result.append(partial)
return
if open_count < n:
backtrack(partial + "(", open_count + 1, close_count, n, result)
if close_count < open_count:
backtrack(partial + ")", open_count, close_count + 1, n, result)
def generate_parenthesis(n: int) -> list[str]:
"""
Generate valid combinations of balanced parentheses for a given n.
:param n: An integer representing the number of pairs of parentheses.
:return: A list of strings with valid combinations.
This function uses a recursive approach to generate the combinations.
Time Complexity: O(2^(2n)) - In the worst case, we have 2^(2n) combinations.
Space Complexity: O(n) - where 'n' is the number of pairs.
Example 1:
>>> generate_parenthesis(3)
['((()))', '(()())', '(())()', '()(())', '()()()']
Example 2:
>>> generate_parenthesis(1)
['()']
"""
result: list[str] = []
backtrack("", 0, 0, n, result)
return result
if __name__ == "__main__":
import doctest
doctest.testmod()