Given an integer array arr
, return the mean of the remaining integers after removing the smallest 5%
and the largest 5%
of the elements.
Answers within 10-5
of the actual answer will be considered accepted.
Input: arr = [1,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,3] Output: 2.00000 Explanation: After erasing the minimum and the maximum values of this array, all elements are equal to 2, so the mean is 2.
Input: arr = [6,2,7,5,1,2,0,3,10,2,5,0,5,5,0,8,7,6,8,0] Output: 4.00000
Input: arr = [6,0,7,0,7,5,7,8,3,4,0,7,8,1,6,8,1,1,2,4,8,1,9,5,4,3,8,5,10,8,6,6,1,0,6,10,8,2,3,4] Output: 4.77778
Input: arr = [9,7,8,7,7,8,4,4,6,8,8,7,6,8,8,9,2,6,0,0,1,10,8,6,3,3,5,1,10,9,0,7,10,0,10,4,1,10,6,9,3,6,0,0,2,7,0,6,7,2,9,7,7,3,0,1,6,1,10,3] Output: 5.27778
Input: arr = [4,8,4,10,0,7,1,3,7,8,8,3,4,1,6,2,1,1,8,0,9,8,0,3,9,10,3,10,1,10,7,3,2,1,4,9,10,7,6,4,0,8,5,1,2,1,6,2,5,0,7,10,9,10,3,7,10,5,8,5,7,6,7,6,10,9,5,10,5,5,7,2,10,7,7,8,2,0,1,1] Output: 5.29167
20 <= arr.length <= 1000
arr.length
is a multiple of20
.0 <= arr[i] <= 105
# @param {Integer[]} arr
# @return {Float}
def trim_mean(arr)
length = arr.length
arr.sort!
arr = arr[length / 20...-length / 20]
arr.sum / (length * 0.9)
end
impl Solution {
pub fn trim_mean(mut arr: Vec<i32>) -> f64 {
let len = arr.len() * 9 / 10;
arr.sort_unstable();
arr.iter().skip(len / 18).take(len).sum::<i32>() as f64 / (len as f64)
}
}