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Just showing how the node of the binary tree looks like. I'm not sure what is wrong but I have a feeling it has something to do with the function being private. How I can compare the private data so I can see if the value I am looking for is inside that node?

    class binarytree
    {
    private:
        class node
        {
        public:

            int data;
            node * left;
            node * right;

            node (int x)
            {
                data = x;
                left=NULL;
                right=NULL;
            }


        };

    node * root;

This is how I insert the node

    void insert(int x, node * &r)
        {
            if(r==NULL)
            {
                r= new node(x);
            }

            else
    {
        if(x < r->data)
        {
            //insert left
            insert(x, r->left);
        }

        else
        {
            //insert right
            insert(x, r->right);
        }
    }
}

Here is the part of the code that gives me trouble when I try to compare x to r->data the program crashes and gives me the error message " Access violation reading location 0x00000000"

void remove(int x, node * &r)
{

    if(x == r->data)
    {
        if(r->right == NULL && r->left == NULL)
        {

            r = NULL;

        }

        else if(r->right == NULL && r->left != NULL)
        {
            r = r->left;

        }

        else if(r->right != NULL && r->left == NULL)
        {
            r = r->right;
        }

        else
        {
            node * temp;
            temp =r;
            r = r->left;
            while(r->right != NULL)
            {
                r = r->right;
            }

            r->right = temp->right;
            delete temp;
        }
    }

    else if ( x < r->data)
    {

        remove(x, r->left);

    }

    else if (x > r->data)
    {
        remove(x , r->left);
    }


}

This is where the functions are publicly. Then I call the private functions so I can manipulate the private tree.

public:

    binarytree()
    {
    root =  NULL;
    }

    ~binarytree()
    {
    //tooo: write this
    }

//return true if empty, false if not
    bool empty()
    {}


    void insert(int x)
    {
    insert(x, root);

    }




    void remove(int x)
    {
        remove(x,root);

    }

};

EDIT: Here is another function of the program that works but might be causing r to point to NULL.

    int extractMin(node * &r)
{

    if(r->left == NULL)
    {
        if(r->right == NULL)
        {

            return r->data;

        }

        else
        {
            int x = r->data;
            r = r->right;
            return x;

        }
    }

    else
    {

        return extractMin(r->left);

    }
}

Here is the new function to check to see if r is NULL

    void remove(int x, node * &r)
{
    if(r == NULL)
    {
        cout<<"why am I null?"<<endl;
    }

    else
    {
        if(x == r->data)
        {
            if(r->right == NULL && r->left == NULL)
            {

                r = NULL;

            }

            else if(r->right == NULL && r->left != NULL)
            {
                r = r->left;

            }

            else if(r->right != NULL && r->left == NULL)
            {
                r = r->right;
            }

            else
            {
                node * temp;
                temp =r;
                r = r->left;
                while(r->right != NULL)
                {
                    r = r->right;
                }

                r->right = temp->right;
                delete temp;
            }
        }

        else if ( x < r->data)
        {

            remove(x, r->left);

        }

        else if (x > r->data)
        {
            remove(x , r->left);
        }

    }
}
3
  • 2
    TL;DR (see sscce.org). Anyway, "Access violation reading location 0x00000000" is obviously a NULL-pointer dereference.
    – user529758
    Sep 16, 2013 at 6:03
  • Run your program in a debugger, and step through the insert function line by line to make sure it's working properly. If it does then step through the remove function line by line. Sep 16, 2013 at 6:05
  • It seems that in your remove function you need to check if r is not NULL... and return immediatly if it is... Anyway as Joachim says, use a debugger when you have this kind of problem. Sep 16, 2013 at 6:07

4 Answers 4

2

you should always check for NULL before trying to get to the inner members:

void remove(int x, node * &r)
{
    if(r != NULL)
    {
       // Your code
    }
}

you call to remove with r as NULL and then try to check r.Left. then here you have access violation

also i must ask, did any if this worked for you? specifically insert wont work this way. try

    void insert(int x, node * &r)
    {
        if(r==NULL)
        {
            r= new node(x);
        }
        else
        {
            if(x < r->data)
            {
                if(r->left != NULL)
                {
                   //insert left
                   insert(x, r->left);
                }
                else
                {
                    r->left = new node(x);
                }
            }
            else
            {
                if(r->right != NULL)
                {
                   //insert right
                   insert(x, r->right);
                }
                else
                {
                    r->left = new node(x);
                }

            }
        }
    }
5
  • Okay I checked for NULL and it shows that r == NULL. How is my root NULL? Sep 16, 2013 at 6:12
  • 1
    @user2782774 As I tell you in my answer: you set it NULL in the constructor so if you call remove on it before you call isnert you haven't changed it. Or if you call remove if there is no node left, then you also put it to NULL this could be because of a wrong loop index or something... do you even udnerstand you own code?
    – dhein
    Sep 16, 2013 at 6:13
  • @user2782774 also, i don't think your insert method works properly Sep 16, 2013 at 6:15
  • yes everything in the code works fine besides the remove function. I have a public void function named "insert" that has an int parameter. Sep 16, 2013 at 6:17
  • @user2782774 i know, but if everything worked fine you wouldn't have a NULL as root.... try to insert and print some items... Sep 16, 2013 at 6:20
0

r is null somehow. You need to check if the r passed in is NULL, or check if the root is non-null, and call remove on children only if they exist.

2
  • I checked and R is indeed NULL but I dont know how that is possible when there are items in the tree. Sep 16, 2013 at 6:31
  • @user2782774 you are calling remove on children without checking, thats how
    – Karthik T
    Sep 16, 2013 at 7:52
0

Well it the error says, r is pointing to NULL when you try to derefference it. So you have to make sure when you assign memmory to r it doesn't return NULL.

binarytree()
{
    root =  NULL;
}

void remove(int x)
{
    remove(x,root);

}

In your case you are trying to derefference NULL (as the error says) This happens in your code when you are calling a remove before you have called an insert. You simply should check at the beginning of remove for r isn't pointing to NULL. Or even better, make sure you won't parse in r when its NULL.

0

You are comparing x to the root. When your tree is empty, root == nullptr. You should check to see if r == nullptr first, as in:

bool remove(int x, node * &r) {
   if(!r) {
      return false; // Indicate whether removal succeeded
   }

   //... etc.
}

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