LeetCode 78 Subsets: Backtracking's Visual Edge
Subsets explode to 2^n possibilities—backtracking tames them. TraceLit's step-by-step traces turn recursion confusion into interview gold.
Subsets explode to 2^n possibilities—backtracking tames them. TraceLit's step-by-step traces turn recursion confusion into interview gold.
Python Tutor nailed the basics. TraceLit conquers LeetCode's brutal algorithms. Here's why it's your new best friend for interview prep.
LeetCode 300 stares back, mocking your brute-force brain. Time to wield dynamic programming like a scalpel—or at least a rusty butter knife.
Twenty years in tech, and palindromes still trip up FAANG hopefuls. LeetCode 647's expand-around-centers nails it without wasting space—here's why it endures.
Koko's got piles of bananas and a deadline. Binary search to the rescue? Yeah, but let's trace it visually before you buy the hype.
Grinding LeetCode for Big Tech? Walls and Gates tests your BFS chops hard. This visual breakdown shows the smart path—and one pitfall that burns cycles.
Staring at preorder and inorder arrays in a high-stakes interview? LeetCode 105 turns that dread into triumph. With visual tracers like TraceLit, you'll see trees emerge from flat lists like magic.
1.5 million LeetCode submissions on problem 1448 last year. Most miss the path-max trick. TraceLit changes that with line-by-line visuals.
Everyone dives into every 'O', hunting borders. Wrong move. Flip the script—start from edges. TraceLit visualizes why this DFS hack owns LeetCode 130.
Swap. Recurse. Backtrack. Repeat until your brain melts. LeetCode 46's permutations problem hasn't changed, but the interview pressure has.
What if the biggest rectangle in a histogram hides the flaw in your coding brain? LeetCode 84 forces you to confront it, stack and all.
Picture cars barreling toward a finish line — some zoom, others crawl. LeetCode 853 reveals how they clump into fleets, a greedy algorithm that feels like magic for coders eyeing big tech jobs.