Me and my friend are doing some school work with programming in Python 3.1 and are VERY stuck. We're programming a binary tree and it's working fine except when we want to print all the nodes in inorder in a way that would create a sentence (all the words in inorder just after one another in a row). We have been looking all over the internet for clues as to how to procede and we've been working with this little thing for like two hours. Any advice/help would be awesome.
Our program/Binary tree:
class Treenode:
def __init__(self, it = None, le = None, ri =开发者_JS百科 None):
self.item = it
self.left = le
self.right = ri
class Bintree:
def __init__(self):
self.item = None
self.left = None
self.right = None
def put(self, it = None):
key = Treenode(it)
if self.item == None:
self.item = key
return
p = self.item
while True:
if key.item < p.item:
if p.left == None:
p.left = key
return
else:
p = p.left
elif key.item > p.item:
if p.right == None:
p.right = key
return
else:
p = p.right
else:
return
def exists(self, it):
key = it
p = self.item
if p == key:
return True
while True:
if key < p.item:
if p.left == None:
return False
else:
p = p.left
elif key > p.item:
if p.right == None:
return False
else:
p = p.right
else:
return
def isEmpty(self):
if self.item == None:
return True
else:
return False
def printtree (Treenode):
if Treenode.left != None:
printtree (Treenode.left)
print (Treenode.item)
if Treenode.right != None:
printtree (Treenode.right)
We get a sort of print when we run the program which looks like this: "bintree.Treenode object at 0x02774CB0", which is not what we want.
We use the tree by running this:
import bintree
tree = bintree.Bintree()
print(tree.isEmpty()) # should give True
tree.put("solen")
print(tree.isEmpty()) # should give False
tree.put("gott")
tree.put("sin")
tree.put("hela")
tree.put("ban")
tree.put("upp")
tree.put("himlarunden")
tree.put("manen")
tree.put("seglar")
tree.put("som")
tree.put("en")
tree.put("svan")
tree.put("uti")
tree.put("midnattsstuden")
print(tree.exists("visa")) # should give False
print(tree.exists("ban")) # should give True
tree.printtree() # print sorted
Also, the second last row gives us "None" instead of "True", which is wierd.
To print a binary tree, if you are printing a leaf you just print the value; otherwise, you print the left child then the right child.
def print_tree(tree):
if tree:
print tree.value
print_tree(tree.left)
print_tree(tree.right)
print(tree.exists("visa"))
returns None
, because in the last line of exists()
there's return
statement without any value (which defaults to None
).
Also you shouldn't name a printtree
argument Treenode
since it's a name of an existing class and that might lead to confusion. It should look more like:
def printtree(tree_node):
if tree_node.left is not None:
printtree(tree_node.left)
print(tree_node.item)
if tree_node.right is not None:
printtree(tree_node.right)
Another thing is calling printtree
- it's a function, not Bintree
method, so I suppose you should call it printtree(tree)
.
One way to make testing easier is to use -assert()- instead of printing things and then referring back to your code.
tree = Bintree()
assert(tree.isEmpty())
tree.put("solen")
assert(not tree.isEmpty())
tree.put("gott")
tree.put("sin")
tree.put("hela")
tree.put("ban")
http://docs.python.org/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-assert-statement
It raises an error if its condition is not true. I know that doesn't fix your bug but making things less ambiguous always helps debugging.
You are not specifying a starting case for printtree(). You're defining how to recurse through your tree correctly, but your call to printtree() has no node to start at. Try setting a default check to see if a parameter is passed in, and if one isn't start at the head node of the bintree.
The reason your second to last line is printing None is because, in your exists method, you just have a "return", rather than a "return True", for the case of finding a `p.item' that is equal to key.
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