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: Tweets
+----------------+---------+ | Column Name | Type | +----------------+---------+ | tweet_id | int | | content | varchar | +----------------+---------+ tweet_id is the primary key (column with unique values) for this table. content consists of alphanumeric characters, '!', or ' ' and no other special characters. This table contains all the tweets in a social media app.
Write a solution to find the IDs of the invalid tweets. The tweet is invalid if the number of characters used in the content of the tweet is strictly greater than 15.
Return the result table in any order.
The result format is in the following example.
Example 1:
Input: Tweets table: +----------+-----------------------------------+ | tweet_id | content | +----------+-----------------------------------+ | 1 | Let us Code | | 2 | More than fifteen chars are here! | +----------+-----------------------------------+ Output: +----------+ | tweet_id | +----------+ | 2 | +----------+ Explanation: Tweet 1 has length = 11. It is a valid tweet. Tweet 2 has length = 33. It is an invalid tweet.
Problem summary: Table: Tweets +----------------+---------+ | Column Name | Type | +----------------+---------+ | tweet_id | int | | content | varchar | +----------------+---------+ tweet_id is the primary key (column with unique values) for this table. content consists of alphanumeric characters, '!', or ' ' and no other special characters. This table contains all the tweets in a social media app. Write a solution to find the IDs of the invalid tweets. The tweet is invalid if the number of characters used in the content of the tweet is strictly greater than 15. Return the result table in any order. 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":{"Tweets":["tweet_id","content"]},"rows":{"Tweets":[[1,"Let us Code"],[2,"More than fifteen chars are here!"]]}}Source-backed implementations are provided below for direct study and interview prep.
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// Auto-generated Java example from rust.
class Solution {
public void exampleSolution() {
}
}
// Reference (rust):
// // Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
// r#"
// -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// # Write your MySQL query statement below
// SELECT
// tweet_id
// FROM Tweets
// WHERE CHAR_LENGTH(content) > 15;
// "#
// }
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// Auto-generated Go example from rust.
func exampleSolution() {
}
// Reference (rust):
// // Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
// r#"
// -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// # Write your MySQL query statement below
// SELECT
// tweet_id
// FROM Tweets
// WHERE CHAR_LENGTH(content) > 15;
// "#
// }
# Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
# Auto-generated Python example from rust.
def example_solution() -> None:
return
# Reference (rust):
# // Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
# pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
# r#"
# -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
# # Write your MySQL query statement below
# SELECT
# tweet_id
# FROM Tweets
# WHERE CHAR_LENGTH(content) > 15;
# "#
# }
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
r#"
-- Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
# Write your MySQL query statement below
SELECT
tweet_id
FROM Tweets
WHERE CHAR_LENGTH(content) > 15;
"#
}
// Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// Auto-generated TypeScript example from rust.
function exampleSolution(): void {
}
// Reference (rust):
// // Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// pub fn sql_example() -> &'static str {
// r#"
// -- Accepted solution for LeetCode #1683: Invalid Tweets
// # Write your MySQL query statement below
// SELECT
// tweet_id
// FROM Tweets
// WHERE CHAR_LENGTH(content) > 15;
// "#
// }
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.