Loading...

Messages

Proposals

Stuck in your homework and missing deadline? Get urgent help in $10/Page with 24 hours deadline

Get Urgent Writing Help In Your Essays, Assignments, Homeworks, Dissertation, Thesis Or Coursework & Achieve A+ Grades.

Privacy Guaranteed - 100% Plagiarism Free Writing - Free Turnitin Report - Professional And Experienced Writers - 24/7 Online Support

Boden johnnie b size chart

23/11/2021 Client: muhammad11 Deadline: 2 Day

Assignment 4: Hashtables In this assignment we'll be revisiting the rhyming dictionary from assignment 2. But this time we'll be loading it into a hashtable and using the hashtable ADT to implement a bad poetry generator.

Point breakdown

TO DO #1: Implement a hashtable ​ - 60 points TO DO #2: Loading the dictionary ​ - 20 points TO DO #3: Removing unrhymable words ​ - 20 points

To Do 1: Implementing a Hashtable You'll be implementing a hashtable class called ​MyHashtable​. It implements the interface DictionaryInterface​. Dictionary operations were discussed in class. There's a description of them on pages 643-651 of the book as well, though the book calls these ​Tables​ instead of Dictionaries​ (as discussed in class, we're using the term ​dictionary​ as well as the standard names for dictionary operations instead of the book's non-standard names). The hashtable you'll be making will use ​Strings​ as the keys and ​Object​ as the values. Similar to linked lists, by storing ​Object​ as values, you can store any kind of object in the hashtable. To implement a hashtable:

● You'll need to define a protected inner class inside ​MyHashtable​ called Entry (similar to how you defined an inner class for ​Node​ in Assignment 2). This inner class stores Key/Value pairs. So it has two fields:

○ String key ○ Object value

It also should have a constructor for initializing the key and value. ● Your hashtable will define three protected fields (remember that protected means that

the field can only be accessed from within the class or by ​any child class of the class​). ○ int​ tableSize​ - the size of the array being used by the hashtable ○ int​ size​ - the number of key/value entries stored in the hashtable ○ MyLinkedList[] table​ - an array of MyLinkedList. The reason that each

element of the array is a linked list is to store multiple entries which collide, that is, for which the hash for the different keys is the same index in the table.

● You'll be implementing the following methods on MyHashtable ○ public​ ​boolean​ ​isEmpty​()

Returns true if the hashtable is empty, false otherwise. You can use the ​size field to determine this easily.

○ public​ ​int​ ​size​() Returns the size (number of key/value pairs stored in the hashtable).

○ public​ Object ​put​(String key, Object value) Adds a new key/value pair to the hashtable. If the key has been previously added, it replaces the value stored with this key with the new value, and returns the old value. Otherwise it returns null. There's more info on how to implement this method below.

○ public​ Object ​get​(String key) Returns the value stored with the key. If the key has not previously been stored in the hashtable, returns ​null​. There's more info about how to implement this method below.

○ public​ ​void​ ​remove​(String key) Removes the key/value pair associated with the key from the hashtable. There's more info about how to implement this method below.

○ public​ ​void​ ​clear​() Empties the hashtable. The easiest way to do this is to just set ​table​ equal to a new fresh array - the old one will be garbage collected (memory reclaimed) by java. Remember to set ​size​ to 0 as well.

○ public​ String[] getKeys() Returns an array of all the keys stored in the table. This function is necessary because having all the keys is the only way to iterate through the values in a hashtable. There's more info about how to implement this method below.

○ public​ ​MyHashtable​(​int​ tableSize) The constructor for the hashtable. Takes an argument that is used to set the size of the array used to store the hashtable. Initialize ​tableSize​, ​table​, and ​size​.

Hash Codes

In a hashtable, to compute an index into the array given a key you compute a hashcode for the key. Since our keys are all ​Strings​, we'll be using the method ​hashCode()​ which is already provided on ​Strings​. As an example: String key = ​"hello"​; int​ hashCode = key.hashCode();

The integer returned by ​hashCode()​ ranges over the full range of negative and positive integers. So the number could be way out of range for indexing our table (depending on our array size) or could be negative, which we definitely can't use for indexing our array. So we'll use the same trick we talked about with array-based Queues of using the modulo operator to get the number within range:

int​ arrayIndex = Math.abs(hashCode) % tableSize; Math.abs() gets the absolute value (to get rid of negative numbers) and ​% tableSize​ puts the number into the range ​0​..tableSize-1​ by returning the remainder after dividing by ​tableSize​.

get()​, ​put()​ and ​remove()​ all take a key as one of the arguments. So these functions will all need to compute an array index from the key to look in the table. Remember that our table is an array of type ​MyLinkedList​, where each item in the linked list is an ​Entry​ (storing a key and value). Why can't we just store the values directly in the table? The reason is that hash functions can result in ​collisions​, where two different keys get mapped to the same array index (because they have the same hash code). So we have to story our entries (key/value pairs) in lists. In a hashtable, this list is called a bucket (or sometimes a slot). Each list in the table stores entries whose keys result in hash collisions. But if our hash function is good, it will spread the data out well so that no bucket ever gets too long.

Implementing ​Object ​get​(String key) To implement ​Object ​get​(String key)​ you need to:

1. Compute an array index given the key (see above). 2. If that location in the table is ​null​, that means nothing has been stored using a key with

this hash code. So we can return null. 3. If the location isn't ​null​, then it contains a ​MyLinkedList​ which is the bucket for all keys

that collide using the hash function. 4. Linearly search through the bucket (the list), comparing the key for each entry with the

key passed into ​get()​. If you find a match, return the value. If you get to the end of the list without finding a match, return ​null​ (nothing stored for this key).

Implementing ​Object ​put​(String key, Object value) To implement ​Object ​put​(String key, Object value)​ you need to:

1. Compute an array index given the key. 2. If that location in the table is ​null​, that means nothing has been previously stored using

a key with this hash code. a. Create a new ​MyLinkedList​ to be the bucket. b. Add the new ​Entry​ for the key/value pair to the list. c. Set this location in the array equal to the new bucket (list). d. Increment the ​size​ (the number of unique keys you have stored).

3. If the location in the table isn't ​null​, that means keys with this colliding hash code have been previously stored. So our new key/value pair might be a key that's already been added (in which case we replace the value), or a brand new key (in which case we add a new ​Entry​ to the bucket).

a. Linearly search through the bucket (the list) stored at this array location comparing the key for each entry with the key passed into ​put()​. If you get a match, this means this key as been previously stored. Save the old value in the Entry​ (so you can return it) and replace it with the new value. You don't need to increment the size since you're not adding a new key.

b. If you don't find the key in the bucket, then just add a new ​Entry​ (with the key and value) to the beginning of the list. Increment the ​size​.

4. Return the old value if storing using an existing key (step 3.a above), otherwise return null​ if you're adding a new key (step 2 or step 3.b).

Implementing ​void​ ​remove​(String key) To implement ​void​ ​remove​(String key)​ you need to:

1. Compute an array index given the key. 2. If that location in the table is null, then this key has definitely not been used to store a

value. No need to do anything. 3. If the location in the table has a bucket, we need to linearly search it to see if it contains

an ​Entry​ with the key. If you find an ​Entry​ in the bucket (linked list) with the key: a. Remove this ​Entry​ from the bucket. b. Decrement ​size​ (the number of unique keys stored in the hashtable).

Implementing ​String[] getKeys() To implement ​String[] getKeys()​ you need to:

1. Create a ​String[]​ with a size equal to the number of unique keys in the hashtable (hint: one of our hashtable fields is keeping track of this).

2. Iterate through the hashtable array. For each table location that isn't ​null​: a. Iterate through the bucket (linked list), getting the key out of each ​Entry​ and

storing it in the array of strings you created in step 1. You'll need some kind of counter to keep track of where in the array of ​Strings​ you're adding the key.

3. Return the ​String[]

Extra Functions for Experimentation

Two extra functions that are not part of the ​DictionaryInterface​ have been provided on MyHashtable​ to let you experiment with how collisions change as you change the table size of MyHashtable​. There's no To Do item associated with these functions; they're just for your own experimentation. public​ ​int​ ​biggestBucket​()​ returns the size of the largest bucket (the most collisions) in the hashtable. public​ ​float​ ​averageBucket​()​ returns the average bucket size. Together, these two functions give you a sense of how frequently collisions are happening in the hashtable. As you make the table size smaller, the number of collisions will go up. In the limit of creating a hashtable with 1 table entry, then every key/value pair is stored in one big list. On ​MyHashtable​ there's also an implementation of ​public​ String ​toString​()​. This allows you to print out the key/value pairs in your hashtable. There's also a method in RhymingDict.java​ called ​public​ ​void​ ​testDictionary​(DictionaryInterface dict)​. You can use this method to test your hashtable once you've implemented it. It does some

simple adding, removing and replacing of key/value pairs and prints out the hashtable so you can confirm your table is working correctly.

Rhyming Dict After you've made your hashtable, the remaining two To Do items are in ​RhymingDict.java​. RhymingDict.java​ already does the following:

● Creates a ​MyHashTable​ with size 20,000. ○ The ​keys​ we'll use in this hashtable are rhyming groups (like ​"AA1 V AH0"​). ○ The ​values​ we'll use in this hashtable are ​MySortedLinkedList​. Each

MySortedLinkedList​ will store individual words sharing a rhyme group. ○ We're providing you with a working version of ​MySortedLinkedList​.

● Does the file management to read each line from the CMU Pronunciation dictionary ○ The CMU Pronunciation dictionary is a free data source of how each word in

English is pronounced, useful for text-to-speech or rhyming applications. ● Writes poems

○ Picks two rhyming groups at random from an array of keys. ○ Gets the ​MySortedLinkedList​ of words for each group. ○ Picks two random indices for each list (based on the length of the list), and uses

these two get four words, two words from each list. ○ Uses those words to make a poem, e.g.

"Roses are tapers,

violets are calmest.

I am vapors

and you are promised."

Note: ​we removed most of the bad words from the dictionary, but the poems might still sometimes make bad or offensive juxtapositions

You need to implement the following:

● TO DO # 2 ​: Store each line from the CMU dictionary in the hashtable. This involves implementing the method ​storeRhyme()​.

○ Use ​getWord()​ and ​getRhymeGroup()​ to get the word and rhyme group for the line.

○ Lookup (get) the key (the rhyme group) in the ​Dictionary​ (hashtable). If the result is null, then this rhyme group has not been added before.

■ Create a new ​MySortedLinkedList​. ■ Add the word to the list. ■ Put the key (rhyme group) and value (list) in the ​Dictionary​.

○ If the result of the lookup (get) isn't null, then we've already started a word list for this rhyme group.

■ Add the word to the list returned by ​get()​. Nothing needs to be added to the ​Dictionary​ since the list is already in the ​Dictionary​.

● TO DO #3 ​: Remove the unrhymable words from the dictionary. Some words are in a rhyme group by themselves. That means that nothing rhymes with them. We want to get rid of those before trying to make poems. You'll do this by implementing removeUnrhymables()​.

○ Use ​getKeys()​ to get an array of all the keys. ○ Iterate through all the keys, retrieving the value (linked list) associated with each

key. ■ If the length of the list is 1, that means there's only one word in the list:

nothing rhymes with it. Use ​Dictionary.remove()​ to remove this entry. ○ If you're curious to see what words don't have rhymes (at least according to the

CMU pronunciation dictionary), you could add a println to print out the words as you remove their corresponding entries. If you do this, don't forget to comment it out before you turn it in.

Example Input and Output RhymingDict​ can take 0, 1 or 2 command line arguments.

● The first argument is a seed for the random number generator. If you provide 0 arguments this defaults to the current system time.

● The second argument is the number of poems to generate. If 0 or 1 arguments are provided, this defaults to 3.

For this command line:

java RhymingDict ​20​ ​4 the output should look like:

If I were attuned

then you'd be the muggy,

And we'd both be marooned

and never be buggy

If I were tiber

then you'd be the jonas,

And we'd both be fiber

and never be bonus

Roses are flourish,

violets are deeply.

I am nourish

and you are steeply.

Roses are learners,

violets are overturn.

I am burners

and you are sunburn.

Turning the code in ● Create a directory with the following name: _assignment4 where you

replace with your actual student ID. For example, if your student ID is 1234567, then the directory name is 1234567_assignment4

● Put a copy of your edited files in the directory (​RhymingDict.java​, MyHashtable.java​). Note: your ​Entry​ helper class should be implemented as an inner class ​inside ​ of ​MyHashtable​.

● Compress the folder using zip. Zip is a compression utility available on mac, linux and windows that can compress a directory into a single file. This should result in a file named _assignment4.zip (with replaced with your real ID of course).

● Double-check that your code compiles and that your files can unzip properly. You are responsible for turning in working code.

● Upload the zip file through the ​page for Assignment 4 in canvas​.

https://canvas.ucsc.edu/courses/12730/assignments/41661

Homework is Completed By:

Writer Writer Name Amount Client Comments & Rating
Instant Homework Helper

ONLINE

Instant Homework Helper

$36

She helped me in last minute in a very reasonable price. She is a lifesaver, I got A+ grade in my homework, I will surely hire her again for my next assignments, Thumbs Up!

Order & Get This Solution Within 3 Hours in $25/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 3 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 6 Hours in $20/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 6 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 12 Hours in $15/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 12 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

6 writers have sent their proposals to do this homework:

Financial Analyst
Top Quality Assignments
Financial Hub
Financial Assignments
Finance Homework Help
Calculation Guru
Writer Writer Name Offer Chat
Financial Analyst

ONLINE

Financial Analyst

I am an elite class writer with more than 6 years of experience as an academic writer. I will provide you the 100 percent original and plagiarism-free content.

$18 Chat With Writer
Top Quality Assignments

ONLINE

Top Quality Assignments

Being a Ph.D. in the Business field, I have been doing academic writing for the past 7 years and have a good command over writing research papers, essay, dissertations and all kinds of academic writing and proofreading.

$22 Chat With Writer
Financial Hub

ONLINE

Financial Hub

I have written research reports, assignments, thesis, research proposals, and dissertations for different level students and on different subjects.

$24 Chat With Writer
Financial Assignments

ONLINE

Financial Assignments

I am a PhD writer with 10 years of experience. I will be delivering high-quality, plagiarism-free work to you in the minimum amount of time. Waiting for your message.

$31 Chat With Writer
Finance Homework Help

ONLINE

Finance Homework Help

I have done dissertations, thesis, reports related to these topics, and I cover all the CHAPTERS accordingly and provide proper updates on the project.

$25 Chat With Writer
Calculation Guru

ONLINE

Calculation Guru

Being a Ph.D. in the Business field, I have been doing academic writing for the past 7 years and have a good command over writing research papers, essay, dissertations and all kinds of academic writing and proofreading.

$31 Chat With Writer

Let our expert academic writers to help you in achieving a+ grades in your homework, assignment, quiz or exam.

Similar Homework Questions

Gandhi movie questions worksheet answer key - Physics homework 5 graphical analysis - Methods of oral presentation - The top morningstar mutual fund performance rating is ________ - Microsoft excel graded project penn foster - The war prayer questions and answers - Strategic management 9th edition dess - Reactions in aqueous solutions lab key - Measuring internal resistance using potentiometer - My bloody valentine eps 88-91 vinyl - Abigail adams letter to her son - Achilles trade price taxi supplier - Relationship between tqm and iso 9000 - The little ark kilbaha - Hylands electrical store longton - Add provider to hicaps terminal - Average issue price - Wsq competency standards - The love dare ebook - Owl english purdue edu apa - Dr sam bolitho neurologist - Eaton clutch release bearing - The pioneers of a warless world - Fire tank capacity as per nbc - Due in 8 hours - Lonely night chords kwon jin ah - How salt affects the freezing point of water - Starbucks after schultz how to sustain a competitive advantage - Cases in Finance - Djd brick & blocklaying - Wilberts pick and pull williamson ny - Many studies show social media networks have a very strong impact on external workplace communication. What about their impacts on internal workplace communication? Discuss and give your opinion in management perspective. - Pig ball handmaid's tale - Cheque account commonwealth bank - The practice of statistics 3rd edition teacher's edition - 123 bus timetable cairns - Industrial and Hazardous Waste Management - Nouns verbs adjectives and adverbs - Illawarra fly treetop walk entry ticket - A research team at cornell university conducted - Discussion 5 - How to cite the pledge of allegiance - The glass cage nicholas carr pdf - Compare and contrast homer and virgil - Classification Model - Unit 7 management accounting - Opening remarks for letter - How to create aon diagram in excel - Eccn 5a002 a 1 - Knight capital case study - Summary of gulliver's travels wikipedia - Separation of photosynthetic pigments by paper chromatography lab report - 1199 chateau rd pasadena ca 91105 - The electric field inside a conductor is always zero - Business intelligence - Jay sorensen java jacket net worth - 50-P1&P2 - Plc timing diagram examples - Succession planning in infosys ppt - Access control Assignment 3 - Examples of perception checking statements - Usted: la computadora suya; la suya - Eng Writing Assgn 3 - Marketing Startegies - Shear force and bending moment numericals - Sheffield city council parking permits - Periodic table practice worksheet - Can monera make their own food - Family planning clinic felixstowe - Oklahoma musical lottery - Say no to plastic pdf - (tco 2) which of the following statements is not valid c++ code? - Magnetic field of a current-carrying wire mastering physics - Saltwater crocodile behavioural adaptations - Human impacts on the rainforest past and present bio 220 - Engineering - Yard force pressure washer manual - Spotted marsh frog call - Airbnb case study harvard pdf - Propose a nursing informatics project for your organization - 4 45 military time - Human impacts on the sustainability of groundwater lab report - Gmb trade union wakefield - English language sba reflection sample - Angular speed to linear speed calculator - Zipcar case study pdf - HOMEWORK - Seaport medical centre launceston - How to write a formal analysis art paper - Hieu 201 lecture quiz 6 - Applied statistics for public and nonprofit administration 9th edition - Advantages and disadvantages of internal fertilization - Champiñón cebolla propina zanahoria - Mark & Making a Tee-shirt - Rational license key server download - Brd document for banking - Rrr reduce reuse recycle - Insurance and Healthcare Reimbursement - Kathy schwalbe project management pdf - Which countries have banned mobile phones in schools