50
Used, New, and Out of Print Books - We Buy and Sell - Powell's Books
Cart |
|  my account  |  wish list  |  help   |  800-878-7323
Hello, | Login
MENU
  • Browse
    • New Arrivals
    • Bestsellers
    • Featured Preorders
    • Award Winners
    • Audio Books
    • See All Subjects
  • Used
  • Staff Picks
    • Staff Picks
    • Picks of the Month
    • Bookseller Displays
    • 50 Books for 50 Years
    • 25 Best 21st Century Sci-Fi & Fantasy
    • 25 PNW Books to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Books From the 21st Century
    • 25 Memoirs to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Global Books to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Women to Read Before You Die
    • 25 Books to Read Before You Die
  • Gifts
    • Gift Cards & eGift Cards
    • Powell's Souvenirs
    • Journals and Notebooks
    • socks
    • Games
  • Sell Books
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Find A Store

Don't Miss

  • A Sale By Any Other Name
  • Spring Sale
  • Scientifically Proven Sale
  • Powell's Author Events
  • Oregon Battle of the Books
  • Audio Books

Visit Our Stores


Powell's Staff: 9 New Books to Read This Transgender Day of Visibility (0 comment)
March 31 is International Transgender Day of Visibility, a day dedicated to celebrating the lives and accomplishments of transgender and gender-nonconforming people, while continuing to bring attention to the ongoing prejudice and violence the community faces every day. It’s also a day that serves as an important reminder to cisgender folks...
Read More»
  • Kelsey Ford: Powell's Picks Spotlight: Kelly Link's 'White Cat, Black Dog' (0 comment)
  • Powell's Staff: New Literature in Translation: March 2023 (0 comment)

{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##

Data Structures & Abstractions With Java

by Frank M Carrano
Data Structures & Abstractions With Java

  • Comment on this title
  • Synopses & Reviews

ISBN13: 9780133744057
ISBN10: 0133744051



All Product Details

View Larger ImageView Larger Images
Ships free on qualified orders.
Add to Cart
0.00
List Price:0.00
Trade Paperback
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

Data Structures and Abstractions with Java is suitable for one- or two-semester courses in data structures (CS-2) in the departments of Computer Science, Computer Engineering, Business, and Management Information Systems. This book is also useful for programmers and software engineers interested in learning more about data structures and abstractions.

  

This is the most student-friendly data structures text available that introduces ADTs in individual, brief chapters — each with pedagogical tools to help students master each concept. Using the latest features of Java, this unique object-oriented presentation makes a clear distinction between specification and implementation to simplify learning, while providing maximum classroom flexibility.

 

Teaching and Learning Experience

This book will provide a better teaching and learning experience—for you and your students. It will help:

  • Aid comprehension and facilitate teaching with an approachable format and content organization: Material is organized into small segments that focus a reader’s attention and provide greater instructional flexibility.
  • Support learning with student-friendly pedagogy: In-text and online features help students master the material.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Prelude: Designing Classes

Encapsulation

Specifying Methods

Comments

Preconditions and Postconditions

Assertions

Java Interfaces

Writing an Interface

Implementing an Interface

An Interface as a Data Type

Extending an Interface

Interfaces Versus Abstract Classes

Named Constants Within an Interface

Choosing Classes

Identifying Classes

CRC Cards

The Unifed Modeling Language

Reusing Classes

Chapter 1: Bags

The Bag

A Bag’s Behaviors

Specifying a Bag

An Interface

Using the ADT Bag

Using an ADT Is Like Using a Vending Machine

The ADT Set

Java Interlude 1: Generics

Generic Data Types

Generic Types Within an Interface

Generic Classes

Chapter 2: Bag Implementations That Use Arrays

Using a Fixed-Size Array to Implement the ADT Bag

An Analogy

A Group of Core Methods

Implementing the Core Methods

Making the Implementation Secure

Testing the Core Methods

Implementing More Methods

Methods That Remove Entries

Using Array Resizing to Implement the ADT Bag

Resizing an Array

A New Implementation of a Bag

The Pros and Cons of Using an Array to Implement the ADT Bag

Java Interlude 2: Exceptions

The Basics

Handling an Exception

Postpone Handling: The throws Clause

Handle It Now: The try-catch Blocks

Multiple catch Blocks

Throwing an Exception

Chapter 3: A Bag Implementation That Links Data

Linked Data

Forming a Chain by Adding to Its Beginning

A Linked Implementation of the ADT Bag

The Private Class Node

An Outline of the Class LinkedBag

Defning Some Core Methods

Testing the Core Methods

The Method getFrequencyOf

The Method contains

Removing an Item from a Linked Chain

The Methods remove and clear

A Class Node That Has Set and Get Methods

The Pros and Cons of Using a Chain to Implement the ADT Bag

Chapter 4: The Effciency of Algorithms

Motivation

Measuring an Algorithm’s Effciency

Counting Basic Operations

Best, Worst, and Average Cases

Big Oh Notation

The Complexities of Program Constructs

Picturing Effciency

The Effciency of Implementations of the ADT Bag

An Array-Based Implementation

A Linked Implementation

Comparing the Implementations

Chapter 5: Stacks

Specifcations of the ADT Stack

Using a Stack to Process Algebraic Expressions

A Problem Solved: Checking for Balanced Delimiters in an Infx Algebraic Expression

A Problem Solved: Transforming an Infx Expression to a Postfx Expression

A Problem Solved: Evaluating Postfx Expressions

A Problem Solved: Evaluating Infx Expressions

The Program Stack

Java Class Library: The Class Stack

Chapter 6: Stack Implementations

A Linked Implementation

An Array-Based Implementation

A Vector-Based Implementation

Java Class Library: The Class Vector

Using a Vector to Implement the ADT Stack

Chapter 7: Recursion

What Is Recursion?

Tracing a Recursive Method

Recursive Methods That Return a Value

Recursively Processing an Array

Recursively Processing a Linked Chain

The Time Effciency of Recursive Methods

The Time Effciency of countDown

The Time Effciency of Computing xn

A Simple Solution to a Diffcult Problem

A Poor Solution to a Simple Problem

Tail Recursion

Indirect Recursion

Using a Stack Instead of Recursion

Java Interlude 3: More About Generics

The Interface Comparable

Generic Methods

Bounded Type Parameters

Wildcards

Bounded Wildcards

Chapter 8: An Introduction to Sorting

Organizing Java Methods That Sort an Array

Selection Sort

Iterative Selection Sort

Recursive Selection Sort

The Effciency of Selection Sort

Insertion Sort

Iterative Insertion Sort

Recursive Insertion Sort

The Effciency of Insertion Sort

Insertion Sort of a Chain of Linked Nodes

Shell Sort

The Java Code

The Effciency of Shell Sort

Comparing the Algorithms

Chapter 9: Faster Sorting Methods

Merge Sort

Merging Arrays

Recursive Merge Sort

The Effciency of Merge Sort

Iterative Merge Sort

Merge Sort in the Java Class Library

Quick Sort

The Effciency of Quick Sort

Creating the Partition

Implementing Quick Sort

Quick Sort in the Java Class Library

Radix Sort

Pseudocode for Radix Sort

The Effciency of Radix Sort

Comparing the Algorithms

Java Interlude 4: More About Exceptions

Programmer-Defned Exception Classes

Inheritance and Exceptions

The finally Block

Chapter 10: Queues, Deques, and Priority Queues

The ADT Queue

A Problem Solved: Simulating a Waiting Line

A Problem Solved: Computing the Capital Gain in a Sale of Stock

Java Class Library: The Interface Queue

The ADT Deque

A Problem Solved: Computing the Capital Gain in a Sale of Stock

Java Class Library: The Interface Deque

Java Class Library: The Class ArrayDeque

The ADT Priority Queue

A Problem Solved: Tracking Your Assignments

Java Class Library: The Class PriorityQueue

Chapter 11: Queue, Deque, and Priority Queue Implementations

A Linked Implementation of a Queue

An Array-Based Implementation of a Queue

A Circular Array

A Circular Array with One Unused Location

Circular Linked Implementations of a Queue

A Two-Part Circular Linked Chain

Java Class Library: The Class AbstractQueue

A Doubly Linked Implementation of a Deque

Possible Implementations of a Priority Queue

Chapter 12: Lists

Specifcations for the ADT List

Using the ADT List

Java Class Library: The Interface List

Java Class Library: The Class ArrayList

Chapter 13: A List Implementation That Uses an Array

Using an Array to Implement the ADT List

An Analogy

The Java Implementation

The Effciency of Using an Array to Implement the ADT List

Chapter 14: A List Implementation That Links Data

Operations on a Chain of Linked Nodes

Adding a Node at Various Positions

Removing a Node from Various Positions

The Private Method getNodeAt

Beginning the Implementation

The Data Fields and Constructor

Adding to the End of the List

Adding at a Given Position Within the List

The Methods isEmpty and toArray

Testing the Core Methods

Continuing the Implementation

A Refned Implementation

The Tail Reference

The Effciency of Using a Chain to Implement the ADT List

Java Class Library: The Class LinkedList

Java Interlude 5: Iterators

What Is an Iterator?

The Interface Iterator

The Interface Iterable

Using the Interface Iterator

Iterable and for-each Loops

The Interface ListIterator

The Interface List Revisited

Using the Interface ListIterator

Chapter 15: Iterators for the ADT List

Ways to Implement an Iterator

A Separate Class Iterator

An Inner Class Iterator

A Linked Implementation

An Array-Based Implementation

Why Are Iterator Methods in Their Own Class?

An Array-Based Implementation of the Interface ListIterator

The Inner Class

Java Interlude 6: Mutable and Immutable Objects

Mutable Objects

Immutable Objects

Creating a Read-Only Class

Companion Classes

Chapter 16: Sorted Lists

Specifcations for the ADT Sorted List

Using the ADT Sorted List

A Linked Implementation

The Method add

The Effciency of the Linked Implementation

An Implementation That Uses the ADT List

Effciency Issues

Java Interlude 7: Inheritance

Further Aspects of Inheritance

When to Use Inheritance

Protected Access

Abstract Classes and Methods

Polymorphism

Chapter 17: Inheritance and Lists

Using Inheritance to Implement a Sorted List

Designing a Base Class

Creating an Abstract Base Class

An Effcient Implementation of a Sorted List

The Method add

Chapter 18: Searching

The Problem

Searching an Unsorted Array

An Iterative Sequential Search of an Unsorted Array

A Recursive Sequential Search of an Unsorted Array

The Effciency of a Sequential Search of an Array

Searching a Sorted Array

A Sequential Search of a Sorted Array

A Binary Search of a Sorted Array

Java Class Library: The Method binarySearch

The Effciency of a Binary Search of an Array

Searching an Unsorted Chain

An Iterative Sequential Search of an Unsorted Chain

A Recursive Sequential Search of an Unsorted Chain

The Effciency of a Sequential Search of a Chain

Searching a Sorted Chain

A Sequential Search of a Sorted Chain

A Binary Search of a Sorted Chain

Choosing a Search Method

Java Interlude 8: Generics Once Again

More Than One Generic Type

Chapter 19: Dictionaries

Specifcations for the ADT Dictionary

A Java Interface

Iterators

Using the ADT Dictionary

A Problem Solved: A Directory of Telephone Numbers

A Problem Solved: The Frequency of Words

A Problem Solved: A Concordance of Words

Java Class Library: The Interface Map

Chapter 20: Dictionary Implementations

Array-Based Implementations

An Unsorted Array-Based Dictionary

A Sorted Array-Based Dictionary

Linked Implementations

An Unsorted Linked Dictionary

A Sorted Linked Dictionary

Chapter 21: Introducing Hashing

What Is Hashing?

Hash Functions

Computing Hash Codes

Compressing a Hash Code into an Index for the Hash Table

Resolving Collisions

Open Addressing with Linear Probing

Open Addressing with Quadratic Probing

Open Addressing with Double Hashing

A Potential Problem with Open Addressing

Separate Chaining

Chapter 22: Hashing as a Dictionary Implementation

The Effciency of Hashing

The Load Factor

The Cost of Open Addressing

The Cost of Separate Chaining

Rehashing

Comparing Schemes for Collision Resolution

A Dictionary Implementation That Uses Hashing

Entries in the Hash Table

Data Fields and Constructors

The Methods getValue, remove, and add

Iterators

Java Class Library: The Class HashMap

Jave Class Library: The Class HashSet

Chapter 23: Trees

Tree Concepts

Hierarchical Organizations

Tree Terminology

Traversals of a Tree

Traversals of a Binary Tree

Traversals of a General Tree

Java Interfaces for Trees

Interfaces for All Trees

An Interface for Binary Trees

Examples of Binary Trees

Expression Trees

Decision Trees

Binary Search Trees

Heaps

Examples of General Trees

Parse Trees

Game Trees

Chapter 24: Tree Implementations

The Nodes in a Binary Tree

A Class of Binary Nodes

An Implementation of the ADT Binary Tree

Creating a Basic Binary Tree

The Method privateSetTree

Accessor and Mutator Methods

Computing the Height and Counting Nodes

Traversals

An Implementation of an Expression Tree

General Trees

A Node for a General Tree

Using a Binary Tree to Represent a General Tree

Java Interlude 9: Cloning

Cloneable Objects

Cloning an Array

Cloning a Chain

A Sorted List of Clones

Cloning a Binary Node

Chapter 25: A Binary Search Tree Implementation

Getting Started

An Interface for the Binary Search Tree

Duplicate Entries

Beginning the Class Defnition

Searching and Retrieving

Traversing

Adding an Entry

A Recursive Implementation

An Iterative Implementation

Removing an Entry

Removing an Entry Whose Node Is a Leaf

Removing an Entry Whose Node Has One Child

Removing an Entry Whose Node Has Two Children

Removing an Entry in the Root

A Recursive Implementation

An Iterative Implementation

The Effciency of Operations

The Importance of Balance

The Order in Which Nodes Are Added

An Implementation of the ADT Dictionary

Chapter 26: A Heap Implementation

Reprise: The ADT Heap

Using an Array to Represent a Heap

Adding an Entry

Removing the Root

Creating a Heap

Heap Sort

Chapter 27: Balanced Search Trees

AVL Trees

Single Rotations

Double Rotations

Implementation Details

2-3 Trees

Searching a 2-3 Tree

Adding Entries to a 2-3 Tree

Splitting Nodes During Addition

2-4 Trees

Adding Entries to a 2-4 Tree

Comparing AVL, 2-3, and 2-4 Trees

Red-Black Trees

Properties of a Red-Black Tree

Adding Entries to a Red-Black Tree

Java Class Library: The Class TreeMap

B-Trees

Chapter 28: Graphs

Some Examples and Terminology

Road Maps

Airline Routes

Mazes

Course Prerequisites

Trees

Traversals

Breadth-First Traversal

Depth-First Traversal

Topological Order

Paths

Finding a Path

The Shortest Path in an Unweighted Graph

The Shortest Path in a Weighted Graph

Java Interfaces for the ADT Graph

Chapter 29: Graph Implementations

An Overview of Two Implementations

The Adjacency Matrix

The Adjacency List

Vertices and Edges

Specifying the Class Vertex

The Inner Class Edge

Implementing the Class Vertex

An Implementation of the ADT Graph

Basic Operations

Graph Algorithms

Appendix A: Documentation and Programming Style

Naming Variables and Classes

Indenting

Comments

Single-Line Comments

Comment Blocks

When to Write Comments

Java Documentation Comments

Appendix B: Java Basics (online)

Introduction

Applications and Applets

Objects and Classes

A First Java Application Program

Elements of Java

Identifers

Reserved Words

Variables

Primitive Types

Constants

Assignment Statements

Assignment Compatibilities

Type Casting

Arithmetic Operators and Expressions

Parentheses and Precedence Rules

Increment and Decrement Operators

Special Assignment Operators

Named Constants

The Class Math

Simple Input and Output Using the Keyboard and Screen

Screen Output

Keyboard Input Using the Class Scanner

The if-else Statement

Boolean Expressions

Nested Statements

Multiway if-else Statements

The Conditional Operator (Optional)

The switch Statement

Enumerations

Scope

Loops

The while Statement

The for Statement

The do-while Statement

Additional Loop Information

The Class String

Characters Within Strings

Concatenation of Strings

String Methods

The Class StringBuilder

Using Scanner to Extract Pieces of a String

Arrays

Array Parameters and Returned Values

Initializing Arrays

Array Index Out of Bounds

Use of = and == with Arrays

Arrays and the For-Each Loop

Multidimensional Arrays

Wrapper Classes

Appendix C: Java Classes (online)

Objects and Classes

Using the Methods in a Java Class

References and Aliases

Defning a Java Class

Method Defnitions

Arguments and Parameters

Passing Arguments

A Defnition of the Class Name

Constructors

The Method toString

Methods That Call Other Methods

Methods That Return an Instance of Their Class

Static Fields and Methods

Overloading Methods

Enumeration as a Class

Packages

The Java Class Library

Appendix D: Creating Classes from Other Classes

Composition

Adapters

Inheritance

Invoking Constructors from Within Constructors

Private Fields and Methods of the Superclass

Overriding and Overloading Methods

Multiple Inheritance

Type Compatibility and Superclasses

The Class Object

Appendix E: File Input and Output (online)

Preliminaries

Why Files?

Streams

The Kinds of Files

File Names

Text Files

Creating a Text File

Reading a Text File

Changing Existing Data in a Text File

Defning a Method to Open a Stream

Binary Files

Creating a Binary File of Primitive Data

Reading a Binary File of Primitive Data

Strings in a Binary File

Object Serialization

Glossary (online)


What Our Readers Are Saying

Be the first to share your thoughts on this title!




Product Details

ISBN:
9780133744057
Binding:
Trade Paperback
Publication date:
08/31/2014
Publisher:
Prentice Hall
Pages:
897
Height:
1.40IN
Width:
8.00IN
Thickness:
1.25
Illustration:
Yes
Author:
Frank M Carrano
Author:
Frank M. Carrano
Author:
Timothy M. Henry
Subject:
Software Engineering-Systems Analysis and Design
Subject:
Computer Languages-Java

Ships free on qualified orders.
Add to Cart
0.00
List Price:0.00
Trade Paperback
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Add to Wishlist
Used Book Alert for book Receive an email when this ISBN is available used.
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram

  • Help
  • Guarantee
  • My Account
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Security
  • Wish List
  • Partners
  • Contact Us
  • Shipping
  • Transparency ACT MRF
  • Sitemap
  • © 2023 POWELLS.COM Terms

{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##
{1}
##LOC[OK]## ##LOC[Cancel]##