So I've been working on this for hours and I'm extremely frustrated. I don't understand what I'm doing wrong.
I'm using Dijkstra's Algorithm to find the shortest paths between a source vertex, and 4 other vertices using an adjacency matrix. The idea behind this is that there are 5 cities and fl...
@StephenGranet in c++ you can use a priority_queue to implement dijkstra pretty easily in...it may be too late for you to try now, but it's covered somewhat here: community.topcoder.com/…
Sorry that it's too late in the day for me to get into graph problem mode; but as far as code review goes I think you should look at at least making a simple class to represent an edge, and making a single collection of those - rather than separate currentDistance/toBeChecked/predecessor arrays
the graph has to have multiple levels because there are about 5 different flights between the vertices, which is why i opted for the third dimension, but if you have a suggestion,my ears are open
WTF is up with people being required to use bare arrays all the time??? I know maybe I had to do that at some point, but the STL wasn't standard then. Effing teachers these days have no excuse.
@StephenGranet don't take what I said the wrong way though...there are really smart folks who hang out here and are super-helpful...if you don't say "gimme teh codes" you should be okay.
think: for the current node (at the current total distance), what would the distance be if I went to (each neighbour that isn't in the path I've taken to get to here)
Side note: Sentinel values are bad. Sentinel values that are within the grasp of your problem space are much worse; I think you should use a much, much different value for 'infinite'
@robjb I don't know so much about it, but somebody posted a long thing here about it from reddit about how it sucks enough for their company to switch back to java
well....it was brand new when I started programming in Java and it seemed pretty reasonable when I started (I was a student). I just grew to hate it over time, mostly because I liked C++ so much better
Shouldn't this check
if(adjecencyMatrix[v][i]>0)
be done with adjecencyMatrix[v][i][0].ticketPrice, like the rest of the comparisons?
If adjecencyMatrix[v][i] is an array, it is getting converted to a pointer, and that pointer will always compare greater than 0. Array-to-pointer decay...
I hated java io back in the day too...it was before everyone had multiple CPUs and multiple cores, but the default way to do stuff was spawning 1000000000 threads, and no async I/O
@keithlayne Oh, then they added the "New I/O" API (that's the official name, in package java.nio) that has async I/O. But it sucks, so with the recent Java 7 they added the "New I/O 2" API (also the official name, in package java.nio2).
Java was new and my teachers wanted to use it to teach OOP, which makes sense I guess to free students from constant seg faults due to pointer issues, but C++ taught right ovbiates that concern now
Maybe the same thing was happening to us? All of the computers pretty much on campus ran solaris. Maybe I blinded myself to that, it only just occured to me.
What annoys me most about the downvote is that I carefully adjusted my rep to a multiple of five, and now this guy comes along and BAM! -2 without comment. And it isn't even prime now.