Computer Science: An OverviewThe sixth edition of this classic text for the breadth-first computer science course has been thoroughly updated to discuss increasingly important trends such as networking, object-oriented programming, and genetic algorithms. Author and educator J. Glenn Brookshear continues to introduce students to the discipline of computer science by providing accurate and balanced coverage of CS as a whole and of a variety of CS topics, including programming languages and artificial intelligence. This edition features new sections on public key encryption, evolutionary programming and genetic algorithms, as well as thoroughly revised sections on data manipulation, operating systems and networking. Features *Updates students on recent changes and current trends in the industry, such as networking, genetic algorithms and object-oriented programming * Puts learning in perspective by using real-life analogies and concrete examples to make even the most complex topics accessible to students *Web site provides students and instructors with online resources of topics found in the text *New and extended ethical sections in software engineering and database systems, in addition to optional Computers a |
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Page 334
... stack applications in general in that it demonstrates the relationship between stacks and the process of backtracking . Indeed , the concept of a stack is inherent in any process that entails backing out of a system in the opposite ...
... stack applications in general in that it demonstrates the relationship between stacks and the process of backtracking . Indeed , the concept of a stack is inherent in any process that entails backing out of a system in the opposite ...
Page 337
... stack will always fit . A solution is to implement the stack as a linked structure similar to that discussed in Section 7.2 . This avoids the lim- itations of restricting the stack to a fixed - size block , since it allows the entries ...
... stack will always fit . A solution is to implement the stack as a linked structure similar to that discussed in Section 7.2 . This avoids the lim- itations of restricting the stack to a fixed - size block , since it allows the entries ...
Page 581
... stack of trays in a cafeteria . Many of these set - ups are spring - loaded to keep the top tray at a convenient level . In this case , the term push is truly representative of the process of adding more entries to the stack . 2 ...
... stack of trays in a cafeteria . Many of these set - ups are spring - loaded to keep the top tray at a convenient level . In this case , the term push is truly representative of the process of adding more entries to the stack . 2 ...
Contents
8 This new section also contains material on LZ77 and image repre | 4 |
Intelligence has two new sectionsSection 10 5 Genetic algorithms | 10 |
MACHINE ARCHITECTURE | 15 |
Copyright | |
19 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
algorithm application application software artificial neural network ASCII assign associated bit patterns Bones bucket byte called cards Chapter Church-Turing thesis circuit complex computer science consider consists contains contents control unit database decode described devices digits disk eight-puzzle employee encryption example executed Figure flip-flop floating-point function goal hash hexadecimal identify implemented input insertion sort instruction integer intelligence Internet knapsack problems loop machine language machine's main memory mass storage memory cell node object-oriented obtain operating system output perform pixel position procedure processing unit produce program counter programming language pseudocode QUESTIONS/EXERCISES record represented request result retrieve search tree Section sectors sequence sequential solution solving sort stack statement Step stored string structure Suppose tape TargetValue task techniques test entry tion today's Turing machine two's complement notation variable