2462. Total Cost to Hire K Workers

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Problem

You are given a 0-indexed integer array costs where costs[i] is the cost of hiring the ith worker.

You are also given two integers k and candidates. We want to hire exactly k workers according to the following rules:

Return **the total cost to hire exactly *k* workers.**

  Example 1:

Input: costs = [17,12,10,2,7,2,11,20,8], k = 3, candidates = 4
Output: 11
Explanation: We hire 3 workers in total. The total cost is initially 0.
- In the first hiring round we choose the worker from [17,12,10,2,7,2,11,20,8]. The lowest cost is 2, and we break the tie by the smallest index, which is 3. The total cost = 0 + 2 = 2.
- In the second hiring round we choose the worker from [17,12,10,7,2,11,20,8]. The lowest cost is 2 (index 4). The total cost = 2 + 2 = 4.
- In the third hiring round we choose the worker from [17,12,10,7,11,20,8]. The lowest cost is 7 (index 3). The total cost = 4 + 7 = 11. Notice that the worker with index 3 was common in the first and last four workers.
The total hiring cost is 11.

Example 2:

Input: costs = [1,2,4,1], k = 3, candidates = 3
Output: 4
Explanation: We hire 3 workers in total. The total cost is initially 0.
- In the first hiring round we choose the worker from [1,2,4,1]. The lowest cost is 1, and we break the tie by the smallest index, which is 0. The total cost = 0 + 1 = 1. Notice that workers with index 1 and 2 are common in the first and last 3 workers.
- In the second hiring round we choose the worker from [2,4,1]. The lowest cost is 1 (index 2). The total cost = 1 + 1 = 2.
- In the third hiring round there are less than three candidates. We choose the worker from the remaining workers [2,4]. The lowest cost is 2 (index 0). The total cost = 2 + 2 = 4.
The total hiring cost is 4.

  Constraints:

Solution (Java)

class Solution {
    public long totalCost(int[] costs, int k, int candidates) {
        int left = 0, right = costs.length - 1;

        PriorityQueue<Integer> priorityQueue = new PriorityQueue<>((a, b) -> (costs[a] - costs[b] != 0 ? costs[a] - costs[b] : a - b));
        for (int i = 0; i < candidates && left <= right; i++) {
            priorityQueue.add(left++);
            if (left <= right) priorityQueue.add(right--);
        }

        long res = 0;
        while (k > 0) {
            int idx = priorityQueue.poll();
            if (left <= right && left < costs.length && right >= 0) {
                if (idx <= left) priorityQueue.add(left++);
                else priorityQueue.add(right--);
            }
            res += costs[idx];
            k--;
        }
        return res;
    }
}

Explain:

nope.

Complexity: