Fork and clone the repository. Import it into eclipse.
a. Scan through the code so that you understand what methods are available and what approaches are used. Make notes on areas that are likely to be problematic.
b. Summarize the key design decisions in this implementation of graphs.
c. Suppose we wanted to work with unweighted, directed graphs. What decisions would we need to make or what strategies would we have to use in the client?
d. Suppose we wanted to work with weighted, undirected graphs. What decisions would we need to make or what strategies would we have to use in the client?
e. Suppose the code was written quickly by a programmer who was behind on sleep. What are likely trouble spots in the code?
The file GraphExperiment.java
contains a series of experiments
with the Graph
class.
a. Skim the file to make sure you understand what the experiments are exploring.
b. Run the experiment to see that the correct graphs are built.
c. Add a few experiments of your own to explore the trouble spots you identified in the prior problems.
You will note that there is a dump
procedure in the Graph
class.
That procedure prints out vertices and edges using vertex numbers.
Write a new version of dump
that prints out vertices and edges
using vertex names.
Write a procedure, readGraph(String fName)
, that reads in a graph
from a file. You can assume that the each row of the file is a
pair of vertex names that represent an edge from the first to the
second.
Write a procedure, reachableFrom(PrintWriter pen, int vertex)
, that
prints out a list of all the vertices reachable from a starting
point. A vertex, v
, is reachable from a vertex, u
, if there is a
path from u
to v
.
Conduct a few experiments to see if your procedure works correctly.
You can use depth-first search or breadth-first search.
Note: You will likely need to find a way to mark vertices to indicate that you’ve printed them out (or otherwise processed them) so that you don’t process them a second time.
Write a procedure, Iterator<Integer> reachable(int vertex)
,
that returns an iterator of all the vertices reachable from a vertex.
You need only implement the hasNext
and next
methods. You need
not worry about ConcurentModificationException
s.
Write a procedure, pathsFrom(PrintWriter pen, int vertex)
, that
prints out all the vertices reachable from a vertex and a path to
each vertex. (There may be multiple paths to each vertex; you should
only print out one.) For example, your output might look something
like the following, showing that a
can reach b
, c
, d
, and
e
, using the paths shown.
a -> b
a -> b -> c
a -> d
a -> b -> c -> e
Write a variant of pathsFrom
that uses whichever searching
strategy you did not use in the original version. (If you used
breadth-first search, implement depth-first search. If you used
depth-first search, implement breadth-first search.)
If you find that you have extra time, write a program that uses breadth-first-search to build word trees.