Off-by-one on range boundaries
Wrong move: Loop endpoints miss first/last candidate.
Usually fails on: Fails on minimal arrays and exact-boundary answers.
Fix: Re-derive loops from inclusive/exclusive ranges before coding.
Build confidence with an intuition-first walkthrough focused on core interview patterns fundamentals.
Table: Salary
+-------------+----------+
| Column Name | Type |
+-------------+----------+
| id | int |
| name | varchar |
| sex | ENUM |
| salary | int |
+-------------+----------+
id is the primary key (column with unique values) for this table.
The sex column is ENUM (category) value of type ('m', 'f').
The table contains information about an employee.
Write a solution to swap all 'f' and 'm' values (i.e., change all 'f' values to 'm' and vice versa) with a single update statement and no intermediate temporary tables.
Note that you must write a single update statement, do not write any select statement for this problem.
The result format is in the following example.
Example 1:
Input: Salary table: +----+------+-----+--------+ | id | name | sex | salary | +----+------+-----+--------+ | 1 | A | m | 2500 | | 2 | B | f | 1500 | | 3 | C | m | 5500 | | 4 | D | f | 500 | +----+------+-----+--------+ Output: +----+------+-----+--------+ | id | name | sex | salary | +----+------+-----+--------+ | 1 | A | f | 2500 | | 2 | B | m | 1500 | | 3 | C | f | 5500 | | 4 | D | m | 500 | +----+------+-----+--------+ Explanation: (1, A) and (3, C) were changed from 'm' to 'f'. (2, B) and (4, D) were changed from 'f' to 'm'.
Problem summary: Table: Salary +-------------+----------+ | Column Name | Type | +-------------+----------+ | id | int | | name | varchar | | sex | ENUM | | salary | int | +-------------+----------+ id is the primary key (column with unique values) for this table. The sex column is ENUM (category) value of type ('m', 'f'). The table contains information about an employee. Write a solution to swap all 'f' and 'm' values (i.e., change all 'f' values to 'm' and vice versa) with a single update statement and no intermediate temporary tables. Note that you must write a single update statement, do not write any select statement for this problem. The result format is in the following example.
Start with the most direct exhaustive search. That gives a correctness anchor before optimizing.
Pattern signal: General problem-solving
{"headers":{"Salary":["id","name","sex","salary"]},"rows":{"Salary":[[1,"A","m",2500],[2,"B","f",1500],[3,"C","m",5500],[4,"D","f",500]]}}Source-backed implementations are provided below for direct study and interview prep.
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// Auto-generated Java example from rust.
class Solution {
public void exampleSolution() {
}
}
// Reference (rust):
// // Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
// r#"
// -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// # Write your MySQL query statement below
// UPDATE Salary
// SET sex = IF(sex = 'f', 'm', 'f');
// "#
// }
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// Auto-generated Go example from rust.
func exampleSolution() {
}
// Reference (rust):
// // Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
// r#"
// -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// # Write your MySQL query statement below
// UPDATE Salary
// SET sex = IF(sex = 'f', 'm', 'f');
// "#
// }
# Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
# Auto-generated Python example from rust.
def example_solution() -> None:
return
# Reference (rust):
# // Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
# pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
# r#"
# -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
# # Write your MySQL query statement below
# UPDATE Salary
# SET sex = IF(sex = 'f', 'm', 'f');
# "#
# }
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
r#"
-- Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
# Write your MySQL query statement below
UPDATE Salary
SET sex = IF(sex = 'f', 'm', 'f');
"#
}
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// Auto-generated TypeScript example from rust.
function exampleSolution(): void {
}
// Reference (rust):
// // Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
// r#"
// -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #627: Swap Sex of Employees
// # Write your MySQL query statement below
// UPDATE Salary
// SET sex = IF(sex = 'f', 'm', 'f');
// "#
// }
Use this to step through a reusable interview workflow for this problem.
Two nested loops check every pair or subarray. The outer loop fixes a starting point, the inner loop extends or searches. For n elements this gives up to n²/2 operations. No extra space, but the quadratic time is prohibitive for large inputs.
Most array problems have an O(n²) brute force (nested loops) and an O(n) optimal (single pass with clever state tracking). The key is identifying what information to maintain as you scan: a running max, a prefix sum, a hash map of seen values, or two pointers.
Review these before coding to avoid predictable interview regressions.
Wrong move: Loop endpoints miss first/last candidate.
Usually fails on: Fails on minimal arrays and exact-boundary answers.
Fix: Re-derive loops from inclusive/exclusive ranges before coding.