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Objectives:

  • get familiar with pattern matching lists, as well as common list operations from Scala and how they work
  • get familiar with common higher-order functions over lists (partition, map, foldRight, foldLeft, filter)

I. Common list operations

4.1.1. Write a function which returns true if a list of integers has at least k elements. Use patterns.

def atLeastk(k: Int, l: List[Int]): Boolean =
  if (k == 0) ???
  else ???
  }

4.1.2. Write a function which returns the first n elements from a given list. The function should not be implemented as tail-recursive.

def take(n: Int, l: List[Int]): List[Int] = ???
//take(3,List(1,2,3,4,5)) = List(1,2,3)

4.1.3. Write a function which drops the first n elements from a given list. The function should not be implemented as tail-recursive.

def drop(n: Int, l: List[Int]): List[Int] = ???
//drop(3,List(1,2,3,4,5)) = List(4,5)

4.1.4. Write a function which takes a predicate p: Int ⇒ Boolean, a list l and returns a sublist of l containing those elements for which p is true. The function should be curried.

def takeP(p: Int => Boolean)(l: List[Int]): List[Int] = ???
//takeP(_%2 == 0)(List(1,2,3,4,5,6)) = List(2,4,6)

4.1.5. Write a function which uses a predicate to partition (split) a list.

def part(p: Int => Boolean)(l: List[Int]): (List[Int], List[Int]) = ???
// part(_%2 == 0)(List(1,2,3,4,5,6)) = (List(2,4,6),List(1,3,5))

4.2. Gradebooks

More general implementation of taken, dropn and part are already implemented in Scala and can be used as member functions of lists. Examples are shown below:

val l = List(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9)
l.take(3)
l.drop(3)
l.partition(_%2 == 0)

In what follows, we shall encode a gradebook as a list of pairs (<name>,<grade>), where <name> is a String and <grade> is an Int. Example:

val gradebook = List(("G",3), ("F", 10), ("M",6), ("P",4))

To make the type signatures more legible, we can introduce type aliases in Scala:

type Gradebook = List[(String,Int)] //the type Gradebook now refers to a list of pairs of String and Int

Add this type alias to your code before solving the following exercises.

4.2.1. Write a function which adds one point to all students which have a passing grade (>= 5), and leaves all other grades unchanged.

def increment(g: Gradebook): Gradebook =
  g.map(???) 

4.2.2. Find the average grade from a gradebook. You must use foldRight.

def average(g: Gradebook): Double = ???

4.2.3. Write a function which takes a gradebook and returns the percentage of failed vs. passed students, as a pair (x,y).

def percentage(g: Gradebook): (Double,Double) = ???

4.2.4. Write a function which takes a gradebook and returns the list of names which have passed. Use filter and map from Scala.

def pass(g: Gradebook): List[String] = ???

4.2.5. Implement merge-sort (in ascending order) over gradebooks:

def mergeSort(l: Gradebook): Gradebook = {
   def merge(u: Gradebook, v: Gradebook): Gradebook = ???
   ???
}

4.2.6 Write a function which takes a gradebook and reports all passing students in descending order of their grade.

def honorsList(g: Gradebook): List[String] = ???

5.1. Nats

Consider the following toy implementation of the type Nat which encodes natural numbers.

trait Nat {}
case object Zero extends Nat {}
case class Succ(n: Nat) extends Nat {}

For instance, 3 will be encoded as the value: Succ(Succ(Succ(Zero))).

5.1.1. Write a function which implements addition over Nats:

def add(n: Nat, m: Nat): Nat = ???

5.1.2. Write a function which converts a Nat to an Int:

def toInt(n: Nat): Int = ???

5.1.3. Write a function which converts an Int to a Nat.

def fromInt(i: Int): Nat

5.2. Binary Search Trees

In a binary search tree (BST), the key of the current node, is always:

  • smaller or equal than all keys in the right sub-tree.
  • larger or equal than all keys in the left sub-tree.

Consider a binary search tree with keys as integers, encoded as follows:

trait ITree {}
case object Empty extends ITree 
case class INode(key: Int, left: ITree, right: ITree) extends ITree 

5.2.1. Create the tree shown below:

val tree = ???
/*
        5
      /   \
     2     7
    / \     \ 
   1  3      9 
*/

5.2.2. Implement the method size which determines the number of non-empty nodes from the BST.

5.2.3. Define the method contains, which checks if a given integer is a member of the BST.

5.2.4. Implement the method ins which inserts a new integer in the BST. Note: the insertion must return a new BST (the binary search tree property mentioned above must hold after insertion).

5.2.5. Implement a method flatten which converts a BST into a list of integers. You must carefully choose the flattening method in such a way as to obtain a sorted list from the BST. Hint: you may use the list concatenation operator ::: (triple colons; example usage: List(1,2,3):::List(4,5).

5.2.6. Implement a method depth which returns the maximal depth of a BST. Hint: use the method: _.max(_).

(!) 5.2.8. Implement a method minimum which returns the smallest integer from a BST. (If the tree is empty, we return -1). Hint: use the example above, to guide your implementation.

5.2.9. Implement a similar method maximum.

(!) 5.2.10. Implement a method successor(k) which returns the smallest integer from the BST, which is larger than k. Use the following examples for your implementation:

    5             t.successor(2) = 5                      
   / \            t.successor(5) = 6
  2   7           t.successor(7) = 8
     / \          
    6   8

(!!) 5.2.11. Implement a method remove(k) which removes element k from the BST.