Given the root of a binary tree, return the bottom-up level order traversal of its nodes’ values. (i.e., from left to right, level by level from leaf to root).
Example 1:
Input: root = [3,9,20,null,null,15,7]
Output: [[15,7],[9,20],[3]]
Example 2:
Input: root = [1]
Output: [[1]]
Example 3:
Input: root = []
Output: []
Constraints:
The number of nodes in the tree is in the range [0, 2000].
-1000 <= Node.val <= 1000
/**
* Definition for a binary tree node.
* struct TreeNode {
* int val;
* TreeNode *left;
* TreeNode *right;
* TreeNode() : val(0), left(nullptr), right(nullptr) {}
* TreeNode(int x) : val(x), left(nullptr), right(nullptr) {}
* TreeNode(int x, TreeNode *left, TreeNode *right) : val(x), left(left), right(right) {}
* };
*/
class Solution {
public:
vector<vector<int>> levelOrderBottom(TreeNode* root) {
vector<vector<int>> res;
queue<TreeNode*> q;
if(root != nullptr) q.push(root);
while(!q.empty()){
int size = q.size();
vector<int> tmp;
while(size--){
TreeNode* t = q.front();
q.pop();
tmp.push_back(t->val);
if(t->left != nullptr) q.push(t->left);
if(t->right != nullptr) q.push(t->right);
}
res.push_back(tmp);
}
reverse(res.begin(),res.end());
return res;
}
};