A Tour of Go - Exercise: Equivalent Binary Trees

A Tour of Go


Exercise: Equivalent Binary Trees

There can be many different binary trees with the same sequence of values stored at the leaves. For example, here are two binary trees storing the sequence 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13.

A function to check whether two binary trees store the same sequence is quite complex in most languages. We'll use Go's concurrency and channels to write a simple solution.

This example uses thetreepackage, which defines the type:

type Tree struct {
	Left  *Tree
	Value int
	Right *Tree
}

1.Implement theWalkfunction.

2.Test theWalkfunction.

The functiontree.New(k)constructs a randomly-structured binary tree holding the valuesk,2k,3k, ...,10k.

Create a new channelchand kick off the walker:

go Walk(tree.New(1), ch)

Then read and print 10 values from the channel. It should be the numbers 1, 2, 3, ..., 10.

3.Implement theSamefunction usingWalkto determine whethert1andt2store the same values.

4.Test theSamefunction.

Same(tree.New(1), tree.New(1))should return true, andSame(tree.New(1), tree.New(2))should return false.



package main

import "tour/tree"
import "fmt"

// Walk walks the tree t sending all values
// from the tree to the channel ch.
func Walk(t *tree.Tree, ch chan int) {
	if t.Left != nil {
		Walk(t.Left, ch)
	}
	ch <- t.Value 
	if t.Right != nil {
		Walk(t.Right, ch)
	}
}

// Same determines whether the trees
// t1 and t2 contain the same values.
func Same(t1, t2 *tree.Tree) bool {
	ch1 := make(chan int)
	ch2 := make(chan int)
	
	go Walk(t1, ch1)
	go Walk(t2, ch2)

	result := true
	for i := 0; i < 10; i ++ {
		v1 := <- ch1
		v2 := <- ch2
		result = (v1 == v2)
	}
	
	return result
	
}

func main() {
//	ch := make(chan int)
//	go Walk(tree.New(1), ch)
//	for i := 0; i < 10; i ++ {
//		v := <- ch
//		fmt.Println(v)
//	}
	
	fmt.Println(Same(tree.New(1), tree.New(1)))
	fmt.Println(Same(tree.New(1), tree.New(2)))
	
}


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