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I'm creating a binary tree by linking individual nodes all the way up to the root node, which I return from the method.

MaxWinnerTree::MaxWinnerTree(int elements)
    {
        WinnerTree(elements);
    }

`Node MaxWinnerTree::WinnerTree(int elements)
{   

int size = 1;
while (size<elements)
    size = size * 2; //gets closest power of 2 to create full bottom row

Node* a[size]; //array of pointers to nodes

for (int i = (2*elements-1); i>0; i--)
{
    //Create nodes and link them to parent, right, and left values

    if (i > elements-1) //leaf
    {   
        //Create new nodes with data -1, store pointer to it in array
        *a[i] = newNode(i,-1,NULL,NULL,NULL);
    }

    else    // not leaf
    {   
        //Create node with data = max of children, store pointer
        *a[i] = newNode(i,-1,a[i*2],a[i*2 +1], NULL); //create
        a[i]->data = max(a[i*2]->data, a[i*2+1]->data); //gets max
        a[i]->right->parent = a[i];
        a[i]->left->parent = a[i];

        if(i=1)
            root = a[i];

    }
}

return *root; }

However, trying to create an object in my main method isn't working like it should.

MaxWinnerTree* tree = new MaxWinnerTree(elements); 

Gives a standard x86 architecture error, where as

MaxWinnerTree tree = new MaxWinnerTree(elements);

Gives

main.cpp:22: error: invalid conversion from ‘MaxWinnerTree*’ to ‘int’
main.cpp:22: error:   initializing argument 1 of ‘MaxWinnerTree::MaxWinnerTree(int)’

Why does the compiler think that my method is returning an int? What is to correct way to create an object in this fashion? In reality, I just need a pointer to the root node, where all my other methods will begin.

Thanks for any help in advance.

2
  • This assignment is assuredly incorrect: *a[i] = newNode(i,-1,NULL,NULL,NULL);. You want to assign a new pointer to the array element a[i], so the first part should be a[i] =. Now, what does newNode return? Also, are you sure you want to return Node from WinnerTree and not Node*?
    – Joe Z
    Nov 17, 2013 at 4:21
  • As far as constructing your object: Without a valid copy constructor, you need to write either your first statement (MaxWinnerTree* tree = new MaxWinnerTree(elements);) or avoid new altogether: MaxWinnerTree tree(elements);.
    – Joe Z
    Nov 17, 2013 at 4:25

1 Answer 1

1

Changes I would make:

  1. Change newNode (which you haven't shown us) to return a Node *. If newNode isn't actually allocating a new Node, then you need to rethink its design. Or, move the arguments to newNode into a constructor for Node, and change your code to read new Node( ... args ... ).
  2. Instead of saying *a[i] = newNode( ... ) say a[i] = newNode( ... ) (or whatever you replace newNode with as per my first bullet). What you have written asks the C++ compiler to invoke a copy constructor to copy whatever newNode returned into the object pointed to by *a[i], but from the snippet you shared with us, *a[i] doesn't point to anything yet.
  3. You've built a heap, but with explicit pointers. If you really wanted a heap, you don't need the explicit pointers...
  4. This next line can just ruin your whole day. i=1 assigns 1 to i and then returns 1 as its value, which doesn't really do the right thing. In your case, it'll make your loop stop iterating as soon as it gets to the part of the heap-building where the elements have children.

    if(i=1)
        root = a[i];
    

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