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💻 Leetcode Study Tool

Tests Status Style Status Python Versions PyPi contributions welcome

Leetcode Study Tool Diagram

This package lets you get grokking as quickly as possible with Leetcode. It provides a command-line tool for interracting with Leetcode to create either an Excel file or Anki flashcards for study. Currently, this tool supports taking in a list of leetcode question slugs or URLs or popular study sets (including the Blind 75, Grind 75, and Neetcode 150).

🤔 Why?

This package was created as an opinionated alternative to other existing packages (as listed at the bottom of this README).

📥 Installation

$ pip install leetcode-study-tool

💻 Usage

usage: leetcode-study-tool [-h] (--url URL | --file FILE | --preset {blind_75,grind_75,grind_169,neetcode_150,neetcode_250,neetcode_all}) [--format {anki,excel}]
                           [--template TEMPLATE] [--csrf CSRF] [--output OUTPUT] [--language LANGUAGE] [--include-code]

Generates problems from LeetCode questions in a desired format.

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --url URL, -u URL     The URL(s) or slug(s) of the LeetCode question(s) to generate problem(s) for. (default: None)
  --file FILE, -f FILE  The file containing the URL(s) or slug(s) of the LeetCode question(s) to generate problem(s) for. (default: None)
  --preset {blind_75,grind_75,grind_169,neetcode_150,neetcode_250,neetcode_all}, -p {blind_75,grind_75,grind_169,neetcode_150,neetcode_250,neetcode_all}
                        The preset to use to generate problem(s) for. (default: None)
  --format {anki,excel}, -F {anki,excel}
                        The format to save the Leetcode problem(s) in. (default: anki)
  --template TEMPLATE, -t TEMPLATE
                        Path to a custom Jinja template file for rendering problems. (default: None)
  --csrf CSRF, -c CSRF  The CSRF token to use for LeetCode authentication. (default: None)
  --output OUTPUT, -o OUTPUT
                        The output file to write the problem(s) to. (default: output.txt)
  --language LANGUAGE, -l LANGUAGE
                        The language to generate problem(s) for. (default: None)
  --include-code, -ic   Include solution code from NeetCode GitHub repository using the specified language. (default: False)

💡 Example

In the simplest case, if you want to Grok the most commonly asked questions, you should generate from a preset. For example, generating Anki cards from the Grind 75 is as simple as

$ leetcode-study-tool -p grind_75

Perhaps, instead, you'd prefer to import questions that you've already worked on. In a directory with a file named questions.txt, where each line is either a Leetcode problem URL or slug (or a combination of both), we can run the command

$ leetcode-study-tool -f questions.txt 

which will generate the file output.txt. We can then open Anki to import these problems as demonstrated below, ensuring to select semicolon as a field separator.

anki demo

Including Solution Code

You can include solution code from the NeetCode GitHub repository by using the --include-code flag along with specifying a programming language:

$ leetcode-study-tool -p grind_75 --language python --include-code

This will fetch solution code in the specified language (when available) and include it in your Anki cards or Excel output.

Supported languages include: c, cpp, csharp, dart, go, java, javascript, kotlin, python, ruby, rust, scala, swift, and typescript.

📒 Anki

When generating an Anki output, the resulting "cards" are saved as a .txt file. These cards include three fields:

  1. The front of the study card, containing the question ID, Title, URL, and problem description
  2. The publicly available solutions (and NeetCode solution or code, if available)
  3. The tags associated with the problem (i.e., if the problem involves a hash map, arrays, etc...)

📊 Excel

When generating an Excel output, the resulting questions are saved in an .xlsx file. Each problem includes the following fields:

  1. ID of the leetcode question
  2. Title of the leetcode question
  3. URL of the leetcode question
  4. Last date that this question was attempted by the user (please note that this is not pulled from your leetcode profile, but left for you to update as you progress in solving leetcode questions)
  5. The tags associated with the problem (i.e., if the problem involves a hash map, arrays, etc...)
  6. Neetcode video link (if it exists)
  7. Solution links for the problem (if they are reachable)
  8. Companies that have asked this question recently in interviews (if they are reachable)

Custom Templates

LeetCode Study Tool supports custom Jinja2 templates for generating Anki cards or other outputs. You can specify your own template file using the --template flag:

leetcode-study-tool --url "https://leetcode.com/problems/two-sum/" --template "path/to/my_template.jinja"

Template Variables

When creating your custom template, the following variables are available:

Variable Description
url The URL to the LeetCode problem
slug The problem slug
data Object containing all problem data
data.id Problem ID
data.title Problem title
data.content Problem description (HTML)
data.difficulty Problem difficulty (Easy, Medium, Hard)
data.tags List of topic tags for the problem
data.companies List of companies that ask this problem
data.solutions List of available solutions on LeetCode
data.neetcode_solution NeetCode solution code (if --include-code is used)
data.language Language of the solution code
neetcode NeetCode video information (when available)

Solution Code Example

Here's an example template that highlights the solution code:

<h1>{{ data.id }}. {{ data.title }} ({{ data.difficulty }})</h1>

<div class="content">
  {{ data.content }}
</div>

<div class="tags">
  {% for tag in data.tags %}
    <span class="tag">{{ tag.name }}</span>
  {% endfor %}
</div>

;

{% if data.neetcode_solution %}
<h3>Solution Code ({{ data.language }})</h3>
<pre><code>
{{ data.neetcode_solution }}
</code></pre>
{% endif %}

{% if data.solutions %}
<div class="community-solutions">
  <h3>Community Solutions:</h3>
  <ul>
    {% for solution in data.solutions[:3] %}
      <li><a href="{{ solution_url(slug, solution.id) }}">Solution {{ loop.index }}</a></li>
    {% endfor %}
  </ul>
</div>
{% endif %}

;

{{ data.tags|map(attribute='slug')|join(' ') }}

🛣 Roadmap

  • Use TQDM to show card generation progress
  • Add support for exporting to an excel sheet
  • Add support for showing neetcode solutions on the back of the card as a
  • Add support for getting the difficulty of questions
  • Add support for Jinja templating formatters
  • Add support for including NeetCode solution code
  • Add NeetCode shorts
  • Add support for fetching premium questions via authentification
  • Add support for importing cards into Quizlet
  • Add support for fetching questions by topic or tag link
  • Reach 90% test coverage

🔎 Other Usefull Stuff