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CS 40: Final Examination Department of Computer Science University of California, Santa Barbara Closed-Book, 3 hours Winter 2008 Instructions • Before you answer any questions, print your name and perm number. • Read each question carefully. Make sure that you clearly understand each question before answering it. • Put your answer to each question on its own page. • You may wish to work out an answer on scratch paper before writing it on your answer page; answers that are difficult to read may lose points for that reason. • You may not leave the room during the examination, even to go to the bathroom. • You may not use any personal devices, such as calculators, PDAs, or cell phones. 1 1. (25 points) Define the following terms: contrapositive of p → q: ¬q → ¬p direct proof of p → q: a proof that p → q is true that proceeds by showing that q must be true when p is true loop invariant: a property that remains true during every traversal of a loop. initial assertion: the statement specifying the properties of the program’s input values. r-permutation: an ordered arrangement of r elements of a set Pascal’s Identity: a Ãrepresentation of the binomial coefficients where the ith row of the ! i triangle contains , for j = 0, 1, 2, . . . , i. j recurrence relation: a formula expressing terms of a sequence, except for some initial terms, as a function of 1 or more previous terms of the sequence divide-and-conquer algorithm: an algorithm that solves a problem recursively by splitting it into a fixed number of smaller problems of the same type 2 2. (5 points) Give a decimal number for each of the following: (a) P (10, 3) = 10!/7! = 10 · 9 · 8 = 720. (b) C(10, 7) = C(10, 3) = 10!/(3!7!) = 10·9·8 3·2·1 3 = 120. 3. (8 points) Prove by induction that 1 + 3 + · · · + (2n + 1) = (n + 1)2 . Basis n = 0: 1 = (2 · 0 + 1) = (0 + 1)2 . Induction hypothesis: 1 + 3 + · · · + (2n + 1) = (n + 1)2 . To show: 1 + 3 + · · · + (2(n + 1) + 1) = ((n + 1) + 1)2 . 1 + 3 + · · · + (2(n + 1) + 1) = (1) 1 + 3 + · · · + (2n + 1) + 2n + 3 = (2) 2 (n + 1) + 2n + 3 = (3) n + 2n + 1 + 2n + 3 = (4) 2 2 n + 4n + 4 = 2 (n + 2) = ((n + 1) + 1) Step 3 follows from step 2 by the induction hypothesis. 4 (5) 2 (6) 4. (8 points) Prove that every amount of postage of 35 cents or more can be formed using just 5-cent and 9-cent stamps. Let P (n) denote the statement that n cents of postage can be formed using just 5-cent and 9-cent stamps. We show that ∀n ≥ 35, P (n), using strong mathematical induction: Basis P (35): Use 7 5-cent stamps. To show: If P (35) ∧ P (36) ∧ · · · ∧ P (n) then P (n + 1). Case P (n) used at least 1 9-cent stamp: Replace a 9-cent stamp with 2 5-cent stamps, producing n + 1 cents of postage. Case P (n) used 0 9-cent stamps: Since n ≥ 35, at least 7 5-cent stamps were used to produce n cents of postage. Replace 7 5-cent stamps with 4 9-cent stamps, producing n + 1 cents of postage. 5 5. (8 points) Let the set A of bit strings be defined recursively by λ∈A 0x1 ∈ A if x ∈ A, where λ is the empty string. Give a simple description of the strings in A. That is, describe the form of the strings in A. When the string is of the form 0n 1n , for n ≥ 0, where 0n denotes the string of n 0s, and 1n denotes the string of n 1s. 6 6. (7 points) (a) How many 5-letter “words” (sequences of an 5 letters with repetition) are there? 265 . (b) How many with no repeated letters? 26 · 25 · 24 · 23 · 22. 7 7. (6 points) How many arrangements are there of the 8 letters in the word VISITING? 8! . 3! 8 8. (6 points) What is the coefficient of x8 y 9 in the expansion of (3x + 2y)17 ? Let w = 3x and z = 2y. The coefficient of w8 z 9 in (w + z)17 is C(17, 8): C(17, 8)w8 z 9 = C(17, 8)38 x8 29 y 9 . The coefficient we seek thus is C(17, 8)38 29 . 9 9. (6 points) How many ways are there to pick a collection of 8 coins from piles of pennies, nickels, dimes, and quarters? C(8 + 4 − 1, 4 − 1) = C(8 + 4 − 1, 8). 10 10. (7 points) Suppose that the number of bacteria in a colony triples every hour. (a) Give a recurrence relation for the number of bacteria after n hours. bn = 3bn−1 . (b) If 100 bacteria are used to begin a colony, how many bacteria will be in the colony after 6 hours? b0 = 100 b1 = 3b0 = 3 · 100 = 300 b2 = 3b1 = 3 · 300 = 900 b3 = 3b2 = 3 · 900 = 2700 b4 = 3b3 = 3 · 2700 = 8100 b5 = 3b4 = 3 · 8100 = 24300 b6 = 3b5 = 3 · 24300 = 72900 11 Master Theorem: Let f be an increasing function that satisfies the recurrence relation f (n) = af (n/b) + cnd whenever n = bk , where k is a positive integer, a ≥ 1, b > 1 is an integer, and c and d are real numbers with c positive and d nonnegative. Then d O(n ) if a < bd , O(nd logn) if a = bd } f (n) is O(nlogb a ) if a > bd . 11. (6 points) Let f (n) = 2f (n/3) + 4, with f (1) = 1, and n = 3k . Give a big-O estimate for f (n), assuming that it is an increasing function. Since 2 > 30 , f (n) is O(nlog3 2 ). 12 12. (8 points) “If a set of 7 integers are selected from the first 10 positive integers, then it must contain 2 pairs of integers that sum to 11.” True or false? Prove your answer. True. Partition the set into 5 pigeon holes: {1, 10}, {2, 9}, {3, 8}, {4, 7}, {5, 6}. Place the 7 selected integers into these 5 pigeon holes. Since there are only 5 pigeon holes, at least 2 pigeon holes must have 2 of the selected numbers. The 2 numbers in a pigeon hole sum to 11. 13