Compare two version numbers version1 and version2.
If version1 > version2 return 1, if version1 < version2 return -1, otherwise return 0.
You may assume that the version strings are non-empty and contain only digits and the . character.
The . character does not represent a decimal point and is used to separate number sequences.
For instance, 2.5 is not “two and a half” or “half way to version three”, it is the fifth second-level revision of the second first-level revision.
Here is an example of version numbers ordering:
0.1 < 1.1 < 1.2 < 13.37
class Solution {
private:
// get number from ver[pos] into num
void getNum(const string &version, int &len, int &pos, int &num) {
num = 0;
while (pos < len && version[pos] != '.') {
num = num * 10 + version[pos] - '0';
pos++;
}
pos++;
}
public:
int compareVersion(string version1, string version2) {
int len1 = version1.length();
int len2 = version2.length();
int curPos1 = 0, curPos2 = 0;
int num1, num2;
while (curPos1 < len1 || curPos2 < len2) {
getNum(version1, len1, curPos1, num1);
getNum(version2, len2, curPos2, num2);
if (num1 > num2)
return 1;
if (num1 < num2)
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
};