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Introduction to Data Structures. Vamshi Ambati vamshi@andrew.cmu.edu. Overview. Java you need for the Project Search Engine and Data Structures THIS Code Structure On the Data Structure front Dictionaries (Dictionary Structures) Java Collections Linked List Queue.
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Introduction to Data Structures Vamshi Ambati vamshi@andrew.cmu.edu
Overview • Java you need for the Project • Search Engine and Data Structures • THIS Code Structure • On the Data Structure front • Dictionaries (Dictionary Structures) • Java Collections • Linked List • Queue [c] Vamshi Ambati
Java you will need for the Project • Core Programming + I/O and Files • OOPS • Inheritance • Packages • Encapsulation • Java API • Collections [c] Vamshi Ambati
What is a Search Engine? • A sophisticated tool for finding information on the web • An Index for the World Wide Web • Analogous to the Index on a textbook • Just Imagine a world without Search Engine! [c] Vamshi Ambati
Why Index in the first place? • Which list is easier to search? • sow fox pig eel yak hen ant cat dog hog • ant cat dog eel fox hen hog pig sow yak • A Sorted list always helps • Permits binary search. About log2n probes into list • log2(1 billion) ~ 3 [c] Vamshi Ambati
How search engines work • The search engines maintain data of web sites in its database. • Use programs (often referred to as "spiders" or "robots") to collect information. • The information is then indexed by the search engine. • It allows users to look for the words or combination of words found in the index
a (1, 4, 24…) • entry (17…) • file (2, 10) • contains(11,….) • position (25…) • positions (15…) • word (20….) • words (6,12..) • . • . INVERTED FILE Inverted Files FILE A file is a list of words and this file contains words at various positions. Each entry of the word is associated with a position. POS 1 10 20 30 36 [c] Vamshi Ambati
DOCID OCCUR POS 1 POS 2 . . . . . . Inverted Files for Multiple Documents “jezebel” occurs 6 times in document 34, 3 times in document 44, 4 times in document 56 . . . LEXICON WORD INDEX [c] Vamshi Ambati
A comprehensive form of Inverted Index [c] Vamshi Ambati SOURCE: http://www.searchtools.com/slides/bestsearch/bls-24.html
THIS • Search engine for the website http://www.hinduonnet.com/ • Website for the news paper The Hindu • Not for the entire web • Results are confined to only one web site [c] Vamshi Ambati
Index Structure for our Project (THIS) [c] Vamshi Ambati
Search Engine Differences • Coverage (What part of the web do they really cover?) • Crawling algorithms • Frequency of crawl • depth of visits • http://www.msitprogram.net/ Depth -0 • http://www.msitprogram.net/admissions.html/ • Depth -1 • Indexing policies • Data Structures • Representation • Search interfaces • Ranking [c] Vamshi Ambati
Search Engine [c] Vamshi Ambati
Crawl Index Search [c] Vamshi Ambati
TheWeb Parser crawl parse Spider addUrls URLList Index addPage getNextUrl Indexer store retrieve FinalResult retrieve makePage Query Sort by Rank ResultSet ResultPage [c] Vamshi Ambati
Where are our data structures and algorithms lying? Priority Queue Queue TheWeb Parser crawl parse Spider Index addUrls URLList addPage getNextUrl Hashtable Indexer store BinaryTree retrieve LinkedList FinalResult retrieve makePage Query Sort by Rank ResultSet ResultPage MergeSort& InsertionSort [c] Vamshi Ambati
Inheritance Uses Calls Spider SearchDriver CrawlerDriver Crawl Code Structure(THIS) WebSpider Index Query addPage Restore Parse Queue Save PageLexer Indexer HttpTokenizer URLTextReader Index DictionaryDriver PageElement DictionaryInterface PageImg PageHref PageWord ListDictionary TreeDictionary HashDictionary [c] Vamshi Ambati
Dictionary Structures (Lexicon) • A Dictionary is an unordered container that contains key-element pairs • Ordered Dictionary has the elements in sorted order • Keys are unique, but the values could be any [c] Vamshi Ambati
Dictionary ADT • size(): returns the number of items in D • Output: Integer • isEmpty(): Test whether D is empty. • Output: Boolean • elements(): Return the elements stored in D. • Output: iterator of elements (objects) • keys(): Return the keys stored in D. • Output: iterator of keys (objects) • findElement(k): if D contains an item with key == k, then return the element of that item, else return NO_SUCH_KEY. • Output: Object • findAllElements(k): • Output: Iterator of elements with key k • insertItem(k,e): Insert an Item with element e and key k into D. • removeElement(k): Remove an item with key == k and return it. If no such element, return NO_SUCH_KEY • Output: Object (element) • removeAllElements(k): Remove from D the items with key == k. • Output: iterator of elements Also see the Java Standard API for Dictionary http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/util/Dictionary.html [c] Vamshi Ambati
Dictionary ADT in THIS Project • size(): returns the number of items in D • Output: Integer • isEmpty(): Test whether D is empty. • Output: Boolean • getKeys(): Return all the keys of the elements stored in D. • Output: String array (Ideally it should be Vector!!) • getValue(k): if D contains an item with key == k, then return the element of that item, else return NULL. • Output: Object • insertItem(k,e): Insert an Item with element e and key k into D. • remove(k): Remove an Item with key k from D. • We have customized the Dictionary a bit as we would be inserting only elements of the type <String,Object> !! [c] Vamshi Ambati
Java Collections • java.util.* (A quite helpful library) • Has implementations for most of the Data Structures • They make life really easy • You can not use the data structures inbuilt unless specified (Eg:Task1 Tasklet-A) • Use them for non-data structural purposes - Collections • Eg: Arrays,Vectors, Iterators,Lists, Sets etc • You would definitely be using “Iterator” atleast as you would be dealing with many Objects at a time! • http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/util/Iterator.html. See: http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/collections/ [c] Vamshi Ambati
Other Data structures • Queue • LinkedList • Beware! there are no Pointers in Java • However there are “references” • Learn more about References in Java • Do not use the java.util package for DataStructures or Sorting Algorithms! You are expected to code them [c] Vamshi Ambati
Summary • Learn data structures by implementing THIS • Mini version of a real search engine • Frame work is provided • More details in the next video [c] Vamshi Ambati
THANK YOU [c] Vamshi Ambati