C How to Program (8th Edition)
8th Edition
ISBN: 9780133976892
Author: Paul J. Deitel, Harvey Deitel
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 6, Problem 6.29E
(Knight’s Tour: Closed Tour Test) In the Knight’s Tour, a full tour occurs when the knight makes 64 moves touching each square of the chessboard once and only once. A closed tour occurs when the 64th move is one move away from the location in which the knight started the tour. Modify the Knight’s Tour
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One variation on the game of nim is described in Luger. The game begins with a single pile of stones. The
move by a player consists of dividing a pile into two piles that contain an unequal number of stones. For
example, if one pile contains six stones, it could be subdivided into piles of five and one, or four and two, but
not three and three. The first player who cannot make a move loses the game.
(5.1) Draw the complete game tree for this version of Nim if the start state consists of six stones.
(5.2) Perform a minimax evaluation for this game. Let 1 denote a win and 0 a loss.
Artificial intelligence (Question - 6)
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One variation on the game of nim is described in Luger. The game begins with a single pile of stones. The move by a player consists of dividing a pile into two piles that contain an unequal number of stones. For example, if one pile contains six stones, it could be subdivided into piles of five and one, or four and two, but not three and three. The first player who cannot make a move loses the game.(6.1) Draw the complete game tree for this version of Nim if the start state consists of six stones.(6.2) Perform a minimax evaluation for this game. Let 1 denote a win and 0 a loss.
6. You are going to play WAR against the computer. This can be super basic. You can have the user "draw"
(pick 2-10, J, Q, K, A) a card, or have both cards randomly generated. You should tell who won, user or
computer.
Example
If I play a 7 and the computer plays a Queen, the computer wins.
If I place an Ace and the computer plays a 5, I win.
If both the computer andI play a 3, we are at "WAR" - do whatever you want with this. Tie? No one
wins? Draw a second card?
Chapter 6 Solutions
C How to Program (8th Edition)
Ch. 6 - Fill in the blanks in each of the following: C...Ch. 6 - State which of the following are true and which...Ch. 6 - Write statements to accomplish each of the...Ch. 6 - Consider a 2-by-5 integer array t. Write a...Ch. 6 - (Sales Commissions) Use a one-dimensional array to...Ch. 6 - (Bubble Sort) The bubble sort presented in Fig....Ch. 6 - Write loops that perform each of the following...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.13ECh. 6 - (Mean, Median and Mode Program Modifications)...Ch. 6 - (Duplicate Elimination) Use a one-dimensional...
Ch. 6 - Label the elements of 3-by-5 two-dimensional array...Ch. 6 - What does the following program do?Ch. 6 - What does the following program do?Ch. 6 - (Dice Rolling) Write a program that simulates the...Ch. 6 - (Game of Craps) Write a program that runs 1000...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.21ECh. 6 - (Total Sales) Use a two-dimensional array to solve...Ch. 6 - (Turtle Graphics) The Logo language made the...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.24ECh. 6 - (Knights Tour: Brute-Force Approaches) In Exercise...Ch. 6 - (Eight Queens) Another puzzler for chess buffs is...Ch. 6 - (Eight Queens: Brute-Force Approaches) In this...Ch. 6 - (Duplicate Elimination) In Chapter 12, we explore...Ch. 6 - (Knights Tour: Closed Tour Test) In the Knights...Ch. 6 - (The Sieve of Eratosthenes) A prime integer is any...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.31RECh. 6 - (Linear Search) Modify the program of Fig. 6.18 to...Ch. 6 - (Binary Search) Modify the program of Fig. 6.19 to...Ch. 6 - Prob. 6.35RECh. 6 - Prob. 6.36RECh. 6 - Prob. 6.37RE
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