The code samples in this book are written in the C++ programming
language. However, to make the book accessible to readers not familiar
with all of C++'s constructs and keywords, the code samples have
been simplified. For example, a reader won't find any of the keywords
,
,
, or
. A reader also won't find
much discussion about class hierarchies. Which interfaces a particular
class implements or which class it extends, if relevant to the discussion,
should be clear from the accompanying text.
These conventions should make the code samples understandable by anyone with a background in any of the languages from the ALGOL tradition, including B, C, C++, C#, Objective-C, D, Java, JavaScript, and so on. Readers who want the full details of all implementations are encouraged to look at the C++ source code that accompanies this book.
This book mixes mathematical analyses of running times with C++ source code for the algorithms being analyzed. This means that
some equations contain variables also found in the source code.
These variables are typeset consistently, both within the source code
and within equations. The most common such variable is the variable
that, without exception, always refers to the number of items currently
stored in the data structure.
opendatastructures.org