Hi! I just wrote a huffman encoding algorithm, or tried to using C++ classes and such. I think it should work, but it keeps crashing at new node creation for some reason.
@sehe I run process in valgrind with valgrind --vgdb=yes --vgdb-error=0 ./my_program and then I follow the instructions (as in, running gdb ./my_program and paste in target remote | /usr/lib64/valgrind/../../bin/vgdb --pid=PID)
context: crashing on memory allocation means you have corrupted memory, possibly by either writing out of bounds, or by freeing twice
also, I'm going to assume this is a uni exercise
because otherwise you wouldn't reimplement heaps since they are provided by your standard library (std::make_heap, std::push_heap, std::pop_heap)
there is a chapter (fibonacci heap) in CLRS I skipped because it had itself said "this data structure is not practical in real life, but the theory behind it is interesting" at the very beginning of the chapter
oh, the book says that while asymptotic time complexity of operations for fibonacci heap is lower than alternatives, the real world performance bonus is only possible with a very large number of elements
What does not returning anything from a function that should return something (according to its declaration) not provoke a compiler error? I suspect that the function might be too complicated to catch this ... halting problem. But it could at least check for the keyword.
@Nils It is not checked because it's also not checked in C. Suddenly adding the requirement breaks previous code. C hasn't checked it because it's ~~effort~~.
Another reason is that historically, void type didn't exist in C
and a function with no meaningful return value would be written like any other function
f(x) char* x; { int i; for(i = 0; i < 20; ++i) { x[i] = '\0'; } }
^ the return type is not specified, so it's int. We can't say void because it doesn't exist yet. But we also don't have return because we don't have anything to return.