Given a string s containing a set of words, transform it such that the words appear in the reverse order. Words in s are separated by one or more spaces.
Input: “I will do it.â€
Output: “it. do will Iâ€
Input: ” Â word1Â word2 ” (Note: there are 3 spaces in the beginning, 2 spaces between the words and 1 space at the end.)
Output: ” word2Â word1 Â ” (Note: there is 1 space in the beginning, 2 spaces between the words and 3 spaces at the end.)
Input: “word1, word2;”
Output: “word2; word1,”
Input Parameters: Function one argument, string s.
output: Return a string with the answer.
â— 1
â— s contains only lowercase and uppercase alphabetical characters, spaces and punctuation marks “.,?!’:;-” (quotes not included).
Punctuation marks are considered a part of the word.
Usage of built-in string functions is NOT allowed.
An in-place linear solution is expected.
For languages that have immutable strings, convert the input string into a character array and work in-place on that array. Convert it back to the string before returning. Ignore the extra linear space used in that conversion, as long as you’re only using constant space after conversion to character array.
Trivia: This is a very old interview question. Google used it as one of their qualifier questions in Google CodeJam in the past, too.
One idea for the solution is:
1) Reverse the whole string.
2) Then reverse the individual words.
For example, if the input is:
s = “Have a nice day!”
1) Then first reverse the whole string,
s = “!yad ecin a evaH”
2) Then reverse the individual words,
s = “day! nice a Have”
O(n).
The first pass over the string is obviously O(n/2) = O(n). The second pass is O(n + combined length of all words / 2) = O(n + n/2) = O(n), which makes this an O(n) algorithm.
O(1).
O(n).
// -------- START --------
/*
Suppose s = "abcdefgh" and we call reverse_string(s[2], 4) then this function will reverse "cdef"
part of "abcdefgh". Â
*/
void reverse_string(char *str, int len)
{
  for(int i = 0; i < len / 2; i++)
  {
    swap(str[i], str[len - 1 - i]);
  }
}
string reverse_ordering_of_words(string s)
{
  int len = s.length();
  // Reverse whole string.
  reverse_string(&s[0], len);
  int word_beginning = 0;
  // Find word boundaries and reverse word by word.
  for(int word_end = 0; word_end < len; word_end++)
  {
    if(s[word_end] == ' ')
    {
      reverse_string(&s[word_beginning] , word_end - word_beginning);
      word_beginning = word_end + 1;
    }
  }
  /*
If there is no space at the end then last word will not be reversed in the above for loop.
So need to reverse it.
Think about s = "hi".
Reverse the last word.
  */
  reverse_string(&s[word_beginning], len - word_beginning);
  return s;
}
// -------- END --------
â€
The 11 Neural “Power Patterns” For Solving Any FAANG Interview Problem 12.5X Faster Than 99.8% OF Applicants
The 2 “Magic Questions” That Reveal Whether You’re Good Enough To Receive A Lucrative Big Tech Offer
The “Instant Income Multiplier” That 2-3X’s Your Current Tech Salary
The 11 Neural “Power Patterns” For Solving Any FAANG Interview Problem 12.5X Faster Than 99.8% OF Applicants
The 2 “Magic Questions” That Reveal Whether You’re Good Enough To Receive A Lucrative Big Tech Offer
The “Instant Income Multiplier” That 2-3X’s Your Current Tech Salary
Just drop your name and email so we can send your Power Patterns PDF straight to your inbox. No Spam!
By sharing your contact details, you agree to our privacy policy.
Time Zone: Asia/Dhaka
We’ve sent the Power Patterns PDF to your inbox — it should arrive in the next 30 seconds.
📩 Can’t find it? Check your promotions or spam folder — and mark us as safe so you don’t miss future insights.
We’re hosting a private session where FAANG insiders walk through how they actually use these Power Patterns to crack interviews — and what sets top performers apart.
🎯 If you liked the PDF, you’ll love what we’re sharing next.
Time Zone: