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C++ Data Structures and Algorithm Design Principles

You're reading from   C++ Data Structures and Algorithm Design Principles Leverage the power of modern C++ to build robust and scalable applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838828844
Length 626 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (4):
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Anil Achary Anil Achary
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Anil Achary
John Carey John Carey
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John Carey
Payas Rajan Payas Rajan
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Payas Rajan
Shreyans Doshi Shreyans Doshi
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Shreyans Doshi
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

About the Book 1. Lists, Stacks, and Queues FREE CHAPTER 2. Trees, Heaps, and Graphs 3. Hash Tables and Bloom Filters 4. Divide and Conquer 5. Greedy Algorithms 6. Graph Algorithms I 7. Graph Algorithms II 8. Dynamic Programming I 9. Dynamic Programming II 1. Appendix

Summary

We covered three major graph problems in this chapter: first, the graph traversal problem for which two solutions were introduced, breadth-first search (BFS) and depth-first search (DFS). Second, we revisited the minimum spanning tree (MST) problem and solved it using Prim's algorithm. We also compared it with Kruskal's algorithm and discussed the conditions under which one should be preferred over the other. Finally, we introduced the single-source shortest path problem, which finds a minimum-cost shortest path in graphs, and covered Dijkstra's shortest path algorithm.

However, Dijkstra's algorithm only works for graphs with positive edge weights. In the next chapter, we shall seek to relax this constraint and introduce a shortest path algorithm that can handle negative edge weights. We shall also generalize the shortest path problem to find the shortest paths between all the pairs of vertices in graphs.

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