Description
Given a 0-indexed integer array nums, return true if it can be made strictly increasing after removing exactly one element, or false otherwise. If the array is already strictly increasing, return true.
The array nums is strictly increasing if nums[i - 1] < nums[i] for each index (1 <= i < nums.length).
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Example 1:
Input: nums = [1,2,10,5,7] Output: true Explanation: By removing 10 at index 2 from nums, it becomes [1,2,5,7]. [1,2,5,7] is strictly increasing, so return true.
Example 2:
Input: nums = [2,3,1,2] Output: false Explanation: [3,1,2] is the result of removing the element at index 0. [2,1,2] is the result of removing the element at index 1. [2,3,2] is the result of removing the element at index 2. [2,3,1] is the result of removing the element at index 3. No resulting array is strictly increasing, so return false.
Example 3:
Input: nums = [1,1,1] Output: false Explanation: The result of removing any element is [1,1]. [1,1] is not strictly increasing, so return false.
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Constraints:
2 <= nums.length <= 10001 <= nums[i] <= 1000
Solution
Python3
class Solution:
    def canBeIncreasing(self, nums: List[int]) -> bool:
        
        def isIncreasing(A):
            for i in range(1, len(A)):
                if A[i] <= A[i - 1]: return False
            
            return True
        
        for i in range(len(nums)):
            if isIncreasing(nums[:i] + nums[i + 1:]): return True
            
        return False