Data Structures and Other Objects Using JavaThis book takes a gentle approach to the data structures course in Java. It offers an early, self-contained review of object-oriented programming and Java to give students a firm grasp of key concepts, and allows those experienced in other languages to adjust easily. The book also offers a flexibility which allows professors such options as emphasizing object-oriented programming, covering recursion and sorting early or accelerating the pace of the course. This title meets the needs of professors searching for a book to balance the introduction of object-oriented programming and data structures with Java. The new edition has been updated to cover Java 1.3 and includes new appendices with more reference material on such topics as Java collections. It also features increased coverage of object-oriented programming and inheritance. New exercises on radix sort and shell sort have also been added. |
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... manyItems , addend.manyItems ) ; 3. Increase our own many Items by addend . manyItems : manyItems + = addend.manyItems ; These three steps are shown in the addAll implementation of Figure 3.4 . the arraycopy method FIGURE 3.4 ...
... < manyItems ) && ( ! target.equals ( data [ index ] ) ) ) index ++ ; if ( index == manyItems ) return false ; // The target was not found , so nothing is removed . else { // The target was found at data [ index ] . manyItems-- ; data ...
... ( manyItems == 0 ) // EmptyStackException is from java.util and its constructor has no argument . throw new ... ( many Items * 2 + 1 ) ; data [ manyItems ] = item ; many Items ++ ; } public public int size ( ) { return manyItems ; } public ...
Contents
CHAPTER | 2 |
LEARNING OBJECTIVES | 14 |
Java Classes and Information Hiding | 40 |
Copyright | |
44 other sections not shown