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Revision as of 06:12, 30 May 2017
Notes
Goodrich et al Data Structures in Python Chapter 6
Stacks
Stack abstract data type:
- Stacks are the simplest data types, yet among the most important.
- Used as a tool in many more sophisticated data structures and algorithms.
Definition:
- A stack is an ADT such that an instance S supports the following two methods:
- S.push(e): add element e to the top of the stack S
- S.pop(): remove and return the top element from the stack S. An error occurs if the stack is empty.
Additionally, we define accessor methods:
- S.top: return a reference to the top element of stack S, without removing it. An error occurs if the stack is empty.
- S.is_empty(): return True if stack S does not contain any elements
- len(S): return the number of elements in stack S, Pyton Python we implement this with
__len__method
Stack ADT implementation approaches
Can use one of several underlying data types to store the stack, starting with an array.
The array-based structure can either utilize a ctype array (as with the Arrays/Python/DynamicArray class), or can just utilize a list, which the DynamicArray class was meant to emulate.
Here is the code for an array-based stack: https://charlesreid1.com:3000/cs/python/src/master/stacks-queues-deques/stacks/ArrayStack.py
See StacksQueues/Python/ArrayStack
Stack tricks
Reversing data using a stack
Exception handling/corner case handling:
- If a file has, or does not have, a newline at the end of the file - then if you print it in reverse order and put it in a new file, last->first line will be messed up
Stack - can provide solution for reversing contents of Python list. Recursive solutions also possible. More challenging task: reverse the order in which elements are stored within a stack (Use 3 stacks.
Stack matching applications
Syntax and matching applications: if a symbol is in an opening structure {[(, push the stack. if a symbol is in a closing structure, )]}, pop the stack. if not matching, fail.
At end, return isEmpty()
Left-to-right scan of original sequence using a stack S to facilitate matching of grouping symbols.
This was also the subject of "Igor" in the Google Code Jam problem "Ignore My Comments," who wanted to put C-style /* */ comments in every file, and wanted help building his own file parser to remove them.
https://charlesreid1.com:3000/charlesreid1/code-jam/src/master/ignore-my-comments
Being able to focus on a single comment would allow focusing one character at a time.
$ cat MatchDelimiters.py
"""
Matching Parentheses
Consider arithmetic expressions that may contain various pairs of grouping symbols, such as
({[
)}]
Determine if these expressions are correct.
"""
from ArrayStack import ArrayStack
def is_matched(expr):
left = '({['
right = ')}]'
stack = ArrayStack()
for c in expr:
if c in left:
stack.push(c)
if c in right:
if stack.is_empty():
return False
right_index = right.index(c)
left_index = left.index(stack.pop())
if(right_index is not left_index):
return False
return stack.is_empty()
if __name__=="__main__":
assert( is_matched("()(()){([()])}") )
assert( is_matched("((()(()){([()])}))") )
assert( not is_matched(")(()){([()])}") )
assert( not is_matched("({{[])}") )
assert( not is_matched("(") )
print("Tests all passed.")