Commit graph

24 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
William Carroll
fa717e8a6f Re-implement suffix_tree function
Create a suffix tree from an input string. This implementation uses a stack to
control the flow of the program.

I expected this attempt to be easier than my first attempt, but surprisingly, it
was similarly difficult. It took me ~30-45 minutes to successfully implement
this function, and I'm still not pleased with the final result.
2020-11-19 21:12:36 +00:00
William Carroll
1088e4143d Implement a suffix tree
While it took me awhile to implement, this exercise was definitely worth
doing. I think there should be a more elegant way to construct the tree using
maybe a stack, but I couldn't find it.

All of this was part of a larger effort to search a string for a variety of
patterns. The solution is to compile the string into a suffix tree and then
search the suffix tree for each of the patterns.

I'm glad I didn't gloss over this exercise.
2020-11-19 00:35:23 +00:00
William Carroll
c0268ed31a Refactor random-choice
Prefer initializing `result` to an empty array of size `m`, which makes the
algorithm a bit more elegant.
2020-11-17 23:54:54 +00:00
William Carroll
751b5327a9 Solve algorithms dealing with randomness
Tonight I learned that random sample where each element in the sampling corpus
has an equal likelihood of being chosen is a brand of algorithms known as
"reservoir sampling".

- Implement random.shuffle(..)
- Implement random.choice(..)

Surprisingly, candidates are expected to encounter problems like this during
interviews.
2020-11-17 22:28:24 +00:00
William Carroll
572fb0fe5f Solve "nearby words" function
Given an input like "gello" suggest an correction like "hello".

This is a proof-of-concept problem for writing a simplistic auto-correction
algorithm for a mobile device.
2020-11-16 17:17:28 +00:00
William Carroll
6989c3a91a Implement the Rabin Karp string matching algorithm
This algorithm is pretty interesting because it runs in linear time with respect
to the length of the `corpus` string. It does this by using a sliding window
hash. This hash -- because it's a sliding window -- runs in constant time for
each iteration; we're only adding and subtracting one character each time and
not re-hashing the whole "window".

When our hashes match, only then do we compare the "window" to the
`pattern`. String comparisons are linear because they compare each character to
each character one at a time. But because we only compare strings when are
hashes match (a check which runs in constant time), this spares us the
performance hit.
2020-11-16 17:14:08 +00:00
William Carroll
a2fa88f561 Prefer mutative variant of delete for HashTable
Instead of calling `filter(..)`.
2020-11-16 17:13:39 +00:00
William Carroll
a457a81bbb Add another solution to the "move zeroes to end" problem
Support the optimally performance solution of which I'm aware.
2020-11-16 17:13:03 +00:00
William Carroll
ff08b723db Solve "find pairs for sum"
I have encountered this problem 3x in the wild thus far:
  1. www.InterviewCake.com
  2. Cracking the Coding Interview
  3. www.Pramp.com
2020-11-16 17:12:05 +00:00
William Carroll
92ab94943e Start working on the "Hard" problems
Firstly, implement a function that adds two arguments together... without using
the `+` operator. I need to drill this problem. Thankfully I took a Coursera
course that taught me how to make a half-adder and a full-adder, but the
recommended solution for this is a bit more difficult.
2020-11-16 17:10:57 +00:00
William Carroll
30f4d6f4a4 Implement a simple hash function and hash table
I was always curious how hashing functions were implemented, so I read about the
"polynomial rolling hash function", and I decided implementing it would be a
good exercise. After writing that, writing a hash table was simple.
2020-11-16 00:35:01 +00:00
William Carroll
363519273a Find the intersection (if any) between two linked lists
As with most linked list questions, this one involves an arcane trick from the
neck-bearded playbook.
2020-11-15 17:42:44 +00:00
William Carroll
c8330adfcb Solve "Move Zeroes to End"
Write a function to modify an array of integers in-place such that all of the
zeroes in the array are at the end, and the order of the other integers is not
changed.
2020-11-15 13:51:46 +00:00
William Carroll
09cd819a70 Include re-roll strategy for rand7
After seeing the solution that my book advocated, I implemented it using
recursion.
2020-11-14 17:36:04 +00:00
William Carroll
5820f6f459 Solve rand7
Write a random number generator for [0,7) using only a random number generator
for [0,5). Ensure the results are uniformly distributed.
2020-11-14 17:26:00 +00:00
William Carroll
a0e9e2b310 Solve unsorted-substring a second time
This solution operates in O(n) time instead of O(n*log(n)) time, which
surprisingly isn't *that* big of a difference...

Consider a size of n of 10M...
  1) ~10s
  2) ~0.5s

So, yes, the O(n*log(n)) will take 100x longer to complete, but for an enormous
input size of 10M elements, it can still complete in under a minute. The
difference between that and the second, faster, algorithm, is just 9s.
2020-11-14 15:28:23 +00:00
William Carroll
48fde5f278 Solve unsorted-substring
Write a function that returns the indices demarcating a substring, which if
sorted, would make the entire array sorted.
2020-11-14 15:08:25 +00:00
William Carroll
47c5c6ac05 Partially implement a Heap
Defining the insert (or "siftup") function described in the "Programming Pearls"
book.
2020-11-14 14:08:58 +00:00
William Carroll
c841527f61 Write encoded XML parser and pretty-printer
Write a function that reads a string of compressed XML and outputs the
decompressed version.

Note to self: Now that I'm growing more comfortable writing parsers, I'd like to
become equally comfortable writing pretty-printers.
2020-11-14 14:00:00 +00:00
William Carroll
bfd2180e6b Solve tic-tac-toe checker
Write a function that verifies whether or not a tic-tac-toe board is valid.
2020-11-13 17:45:07 +00:00
William Carroll
1b3f1b99f5 Solve box-stacking problem
Write a function to compute the highest stack of boxes that can be created from
a list of boxes.
2020-11-13 16:57:47 +00:00
William Carroll
7672049e1c Solve N queens
After a five year hiatus, I decided to attempt to solve the famous N queens
problem again. This time, instead of modeling the chess board using a
`[[Bool]]`, I'm using `[Integer]` where the `Integer` indicates which column has
a queen. This is a bit lighter in RAM.
2020-11-13 16:56:02 +00:00
William Carroll
14f6169fcf Document subset of BNF for regex engine
Adding some documentation for my future self.
2020-11-13 16:55:39 +00:00
William Carroll
aa66d9b83d Add coding exercises for Facebook interviews
Add attempts at solving coding problems to Briefcase.
2020-11-12 14:37:29 +00:00