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Assignment 2: A Simple Address Book Andy Wang Data Structures, Algorithms, and Generic Programming Learning Objectives Gain further experience in C++ Manage project develop using make Apply the concept of hash functions Mission Write a simple address book Use hash functions to access a table Insertion Lookup Deletion Deliverables (Due 9/26/2003) makefile hashtable.h hashtable.cpp main.cpp Development logs More on Development Log Due in each class Cumulative 9/17, turn in a log that covers 9/15 – 9/17 9/22, turn in a log that covers 9/15 – 9/22 And so on… Requirements Create a proj2 directory makefile hashtable.h hashtable.cpp main.cpp hashtable.h Interface of the class HashTable Required public interface: bool Insert(const string &name, const string &addr); bool Lookup(const string &name, string *addr) const; string Remove(const string &name); Constructor Hashtable(unsigned int size); Default size: 5 Insert() bool Insert(const string &name, const string &addr); • Return value • • true on success false on failure • • Duplicate name Table is full Insert() Name: Michael Jackson Address: 0 1 2 3 Hash Table Insert() Name: Michael Jackson Address: Never-Never Land Hash(name) 0 1 2 3 Hash Table Insert() Name: Michael Jackson Address: Never-Never Land Hash(name) 0 1 Michael Jackson Never-Never Land 2 3 Hash Table Insert() Name: Mickey Mouse Address: Disneyland 0 1 Michael Jackson Never-Never Land 2 3 Hash Table Insert() Name: Mickey Mouse Address: Disneyland Oh, Boy! Hash(name) 0 1 Michael Jackson Never-Never Land 2 3 Hash Table One problem with hashing—collision Collision handling techniques: Increase the hash table size Chaining Linear probing Quadratic probing Double hashing Increase the Hash Table Size If collision, double the size, rehash all entries + Conceptually simple Unbounded growth of table size Birthday Paradox In a group of 60 people, you are very likely to find two people with the same birthday. The probability of collisions is higher than you think! Chaining Requires a data structure from a later lecture Basic idea: each table entry is associated with multiple (key, value) pairs Sequentially look through those pairs + incremental growth of the table - poor performance when an entry is associated with too many (key, value) pairs Linear Probing Sequentially find the next empty table entry (Hash(key) + 1) % size (Hash(key) + 2) % size … + Simple + Use all table entries before size increase - Clustering (nonuniform distribution of table entries) - Can degenerate into sequential searches Quadratic Probing Try to avoid clustering (Hash(key) + 12) % size 2 (Hash(key) + 2 ) % size… + Simple - Secondary clustering (not as severe) Double Hashing Use another hash function to determine the skipping distance If Hash1(key) points to an occupied entry Use (Hash1(key) + Hash2(Hash1(key))) % size (Hash1(key) + 2*Hash2(Hash1(key)) % size… + Avoids secondary clustering + Widely used in compilers Lookup() bool Lookup(const string &name, string *address) const; • Return value • true if found • • address contains the address false if not found Lookup() Name: Michael Jackson 0 1 Michael Jackson Never-Never Land 2 3 Hash Table Lookup() Name: Michael Jackson Hash(name) 0 1 Michael Jackson Never-Never Land 2 3 Hash Table Remove() string Remove(const string &name) const; • Return value • The address associated with the name Remove() Name: Michael Jackson 0 1 Michael Jackson Never-Never Land 2 3 Hash Table Remove() Name: Michael Jackson Hash(name) 0 1 Michael Jackson Never-Never Land 2 3 Hash Table Remove() Name: Michael Jackson Hash(name) 0 1 2 3 Hash Table Your Hash Function Hash(name) // may contain spaces Develop/choose your own hash function(s) Use all characters in the name Use the ordering information of each character Short names should not cluster in the table Milestones 1. Create all files Add #include into .cpp files Add #ifndef into .h files Add files names into the makefile make clean make Milestones 2. Add the class definitions to the header files Try to compile 3. Write the skeleton code in your .cpp files Nothing but empty functions Try to get the interface to compile 4. Write pseudo code (comments) in each skeleton function Milestones 5. Implement the constructor/destructor routines Add private functions as needed Compile and test those routines 6. Implement a dump routine to visualize the hash table Milestones 7. Implement the accessor routines that only read your private data members Compile and test those routines 8. Implement the accessor routines that write to your private data members Compile and test those routines Milestones 9. Implement the Insert routine Implement the associated hash function(s) Test the hash function in isolation Check for clustering Check for duplicate names 10. Implement collision handling Milestones 11. Implement the Lookup routine Compile and test the routine 12. Implement the Remove routine. Compile and test the routine Pace Yourself Try to accomplish 1 to 2 milestones per day Start your project early!