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Chapter 8.2, Problem 8.1CP

Explanation of Solution

Difference between linear search and binary search:

Linear search Binary search
Linear search or sequential search is the process of searching for a particular element that is present in the array one by one till the last element in the search element is found. Binary search is a smart search process that searches for the particular element that is present in the array from the middle towards the left or right until the search element is found.
The search uses a loop that iterates from the beginning till the last element to find the search element.

The search element is searched from the middle as the elements present in the array need to be present in the sorted order...

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Exercise 1 Function and Structure [30 pts] Please debug the following program and answer the following questions. There is a cycle in a linked list if some node in the list can be reached again by continuously following the next pointer. #include typedef struct node { int value; struct node *next; } node; int 11_has_cycle (node *first) if (first == node *head = { NULL) return 0; first; while (head->next != NULL) { } if (head first) { return 1; } head = head->next; return 0; void test ll_has_cycle () { int i; node nodes [6]; for (i = 0; i < 6; i++) { nodes [i] .next = NULL; nodes [i].value = i; } nodes [0] .next = &nodes [1]; nodes [1] .next = &nodes [2]; nodes [2] .next = &nodes [3]; nodes [3] .next nodes [4] .next &nodes [4]; NULL; nodes [5] .next = &nodes [0]; printf("1. Checking first list for cycles. \n Function 11_has_cycle says it has s cycle\n\n", 11_has_cycle (&nodes [0])?"a":"no"); printf("2. Checking length-zero list for cycles. \n Function 11_has_cycle says it has %s…

Chapter 8 Solutions

Starting Out with C++ from Control Structures to Objects Plus MyLab Programming with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (9th Edition)

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