2

For Some background here is the problem statement.

It is a well-researched fact that men in a restroom generally prefer to maximize their distance from already occupied stalls, by occupying the middle of the longest sequence of unoccupied places. For example, consider the situation where ten stalls are empty.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ The first visitor will occupy a middle position:

_ _ _ _ _ X _ _ _ _ The next visitor will be in the middle of the empty area at the left.

_ _ X _ _ X _ _ _ _

Write a program that reads the number of stalls and then prints out diagrams in the format given above when the stalls become filled, one at a time. Hint: Use an array of boolean values toindicate whether a stall is occupied.

I have also found the solution for which I understand for the most part but am having trouble understanding a bit. Here it is

import java.util.Scanner;
class StallLogic
{
    public void printStalls(boolean [] b)
    {
        for(boolean s:b)
        {
            System.out.print((s?"X" : "_") + " ");
        }
        System.out.print("\n");
    }
    
    public boolean giveFlag(boolean [] b)
    {
        for(boolean s : b)
        {
            if(!s) return false;
        }
        return true;
    }
    
    public int getLongest(boolean [] b)
    {
        int length = 0, temp = 0;
        int len = b.length;
        for(int i = 0; i < len ; i++)
        {
            if (b[i] == false)
            {
                temp++;
            }
            else{
                temp = 0;
            }
            if (length < temp)
                length = temp;
        }
        return length;
    }
    
    public int checkIndex(boolean [] b)
    {
        int length = 0 , temp = 0, ind = 0;
        int len = b.length;
        for (int i = 0 ; i < len ; i++)
        {
            if(b[i] == false)
            {
                temp++;
            }
            else{
                temp = 0;
            }
            if (length < temp)
            {
                ind = i -length;
                length = temp;
            }
        }
        return ind;
    }
    
    public void findStalls(boolean [] b)
    {
        int loc = checkIndex(b);
        int len = getLongest(b);
        int ind = loc + len / 2;
        b[ind] = true;
    }
}

public class checkStall
{
    public static void main(String [] args)
    {
    StallLogic stallin = new StallLogic();  
    System.out.print("Enter number of stalls");
    Scanner in = new Scanner(System.in);
    int i = in.nextInt();
    boolean [] stalls = new boolean [i];
    while(!stallin.giveFlag(stalls))    
    {
        stallin.findStalls(stalls);
        stallin.printStalls(stalls);
    }
    
    }

    
}

My Struggles

I'm having trouble understand what the point of checkIndex really is. I understand that getLongest, will tell us which parts of the arraylist have the most successive _'s

For example in _ _ _ _ _ X _ _ _ _ We check that the left side has more _ with getLongest. Now the problem is we need an actual index to put the X in. How Will our program know whether to put it on the left side or the right side of every pre-existing X? This is where I PRESUME the checkIndex comes in.

Particularly What I am confused about is why I am taking the maximum count of how many _'s there are and adding it with the specific index? I.e int ind = loc + len / 2;

What is checkIndex and int ind = loc + len / 2, exactly doing here? Is there some algorithm for this I am not realizing?

4
  • 2
    Seems to be a standard divide-and-conquer algorithm. You don't understand the midpoint formula? Aug 9, 2016 at 16:28
  • 1
    The point of such an exercise is for you to come up with a solution of your own, not to steal a solution you don't even understand. It's coming up with a solution that teaches you best.
    – Andreas
    Aug 9, 2016 at 16:30
  • 1
    I wouldn't have asked this question if I didn't try. The whole point of asking is because I couldn't solve it. There is no "stealing" Aug 9, 2016 at 16:44
  • ...and when people make accusations without any concrete evidence, it kind of bothers me. I see no way that @Andreas could know about you not understanding the problem. I see code, I see your "Struggles," and I most certainly do NOT see any "stealing" Aug 9, 2016 at 18:02

1 Answer 1

1

Without writing out the algorithm, it would appear that getLongest is returning the length of the longest empty section of stalls.

Then, checkIndex gets the left-most empty stall of that same section.

With those two numbers, you simply split the difference, and occupy that stall left + (length / 2).


It's a less efficient approach by "scanning" the stalls twice. The getLongest and checkIndex methods could be combined to return an int[] of both positions because the inclusion of int ind is the only change between the two methods.

9
  • Why does checkIndex et the left most empty stall? I thought it simply counts the largest amount of _'s that are next to each other? For example _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ has length 9, _ _ _ _ _ X _ _ _ _ now temp = 5, and it won't care about the temp =4 after the X, since the old temp is 5. Aug 9, 2016 at 17:44
  • In the case of _ _ _ _ _ X _ _ _ _, I think checkIndex will return 0 while getLongest returns 5. You are welcome to debug yourself and check. Aug 9, 2016 at 17:47
  • 1
    That's another approach. I've updated my answer with that explanation. Aug 9, 2016 at 17:57
  • 1
    Okay, I'm still a bit confused but I'm going to trace the program on paper and see if that helps. Thanks alot Aug 9, 2016 at 18:02
  • 1
    OoOoOoOooOoO. I get it! This is genius!! Honestly, would have never thought of it! Aug 9, 2016 at 18:30

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