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  2. Visitor pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visitor_pattern

    The Visitor [1] design pattern is one of the twenty-three well-known Gang of Four design patterns that describe how to solve recurring design problems to design flexible and reusable object-oriented software, that is, objects that are easier to implement, change, test, and reuse.

  3. Go (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_(programming_language)

    For a pair of types K, V, the type map[K]V is the type mapping type-K keys to type-V values, though Go Programming Language specification does not give any performance guarantees or implementation requirements for map types. Hash tables are built into the language, with special syntax and built-in functions.

  4. Read-copy-update - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Read-copy-update

    Read-copy-update insertion procedure. A thread allocates a structure with three fields, then sets the global pointer gptr to point to this structure.. A key property of RCU is that readers can access a data structure even when it is in the process of being updated: RCU updaters cannot block readers or force them to retry their accesses.

  5. Tree traversal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_traversal

    For example, given a binary tree of infinite depth, a depth-first search will go down one side (by convention the left side) of the tree, never visiting the rest, and indeed an in-order or post-order traversal will never visit any nodes, as it has not reached a leaf (and in fact never will). By contrast, a breadth-first (level-order) traversal ...

  6. Self-organizing map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-organizing_map

    Randomize the map's nodes' weight vectors; Traverse each input vector in the input data set Traverse each node in the map Use the Euclidean distance formula to find the similarity between the input vector and the map's node's weight vector; Track the node that produces the smallest distance (this node is the best matching unit, BMU)

  7. Depth-first search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depth-first_search

    The recursive implementation will visit the nodes from the example graph in the following order: A, B, D, F, E, C, G. The non-recursive implementation will visit the nodes as: A, E, F, B, D, C, G. The non-recursive implementation is similar to breadth-first search but differs from it in two ways: it uses a stack instead of a queue, and

  8. Graph traversal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_traversal

    The steps specified in the sequence are relative to the current node, not absolute. For example, if the current node is v j, and v j has d neighbors, then the traversal sequence will specify the next node to visit, v j+1, as the i th neighbor of v j, where 1 ≤ i ≤ d.

  9. Dancing Links - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dancing_Links

    A distributed Dancing Links implementation as a Hadoop MapReduce example; Free Software implementation of an Exact Cover solver in C - uses Algorithm X and Dancing Links. Includes examples for sudoku and logic grid puzzles. DlxLib NuGet package - a C# class library that implements DLX; dlxlib npm package - a JavaScript library that implements DLX