(Paper) Microsoft Placement Question Paper?(Algorithm And Programming) SET-2
Microsoft Placement
Question Paper
(Algorithm And Programming) Set -2
57. C++ ( what is virtual function ? what happens
if an error occurs in constructor or destructor. Discussion on error handling,
templates, unique features of C++. What is different in C++, ( compare with unix).
58. Given a list of numbers ( fixed list) Now given any other list, how can you
efficiently find out if there is any element in the second list that is an
element of the first list (fixed list).
59. Given 3 lines of assembly code : find it is doing. IT was to find absolute
value.
60. If you are on a boat and you throw out a suitcase, Will the level of water
increase.
61. Print an integer using only putchar. Try doing it without using extra
storage.
62. Write C code for (a) deleting an element from a linked list (b) traversing a
linked list
63. What are various problems unique to distributed databases
64. Declare a void pointer ANS. void *ptr;
65. Make the pointer aligned to a 4 byte boundary in a efficient manner ANS.
Assign the pointer to a long number and the number with 11...1100 add 4 to the
number
66. What is a far pointer (in DOS)
67. What is a balanced tree
68. Given a linked list with the following property node2 is left child of
node1, if node2 < node1 else, it is the right child.
O P
|
|
O A
|
|
O B
|
|
O C
How do you convert the above linked list to the form without disturbing the
property. Write C code for that.
O P
|
|
O B
/ \
/ \
/ \
O ? O ?
determine where do A and C go
69. Describe the file system layout in the UNIX OS
ANS. describe boot block, super block, inodes and data layout
70. In UNIX, are the files allocated contiguous blocks of data
ANS. no, they might be fragmented
How is the fragmented data kept track of
ANS. Describe the direct blocks and indirect blocks in UNIX file system
71. Write an efficient C code for 'tr' program. 'tr' has two command line
arguments. They both are strings of same length. tr reads an input file,
replaces each character in the first string with the corresponding character in
the second string. eg. 'tr abc xyz' replaces all 'a's by 'x's, 'b's by 'y's and
so on. ANS.
a) have an array of length 26.
put 'x' in array element corr to 'a'
put 'y' in array element corr to 'b'
put 'z' in array element corr to 'c'
put 'd' in array element corr to 'd'
put 'e' in array element corr to 'e'
and so on.
the code
while (!eof)
{
c = getc();
putc(array[c - 'a']);
}
72. what is disk interleaving
73. why is disk interleaving adopted
74. given a new disk, how do you determine which interleaving is the best a)
give 1000 read operations with each kind of interleaving determine the best
interleaving from the statistics
75. draw the graph with performance on one axis and 'n' on another, where 'n' in
the 'n' in n-way disk interleaving. (a tricky question, should be answered
carefully)
76. I was a c++ code and was asked to find out the bug in that. The bug was that
he declared an object locally in a function and tried to return the pointer to
that object. Since the object is local to the function, it no more exists after
returning from the function. The pointer, therefore, is invalid outside.
77. A real life problem - A square picture is cut into 16 squares and they are
shuffled. Write a program to rearrange the 16 squares to get the original big
square.
78.
int *a;
char *c;
*(a) = 20;
*c = *a;
printf("%c",*c);
what is the output?
79. Write a program to find whether a given m/c is big-endian or little-endian!
80. What is a volatile variable?
81. What is the scope of a static function in C ?
82. What is the difference between "malloc" and "calloc"?
83. struct n { int data; struct n* next}node;
node *c,*t;
c->data = 10;
t->next = null;
*c = *t;
what is the effect of the last statement?
84. If you're familiar with the ? operator x ? y : z
you want to implement that in a function: int cond(int x, int y, int z); using
only ~, !, ^, &, +, |, <<, >> no if statements, or loops or
anything else, just those operators, and the function should correctly return y
or z based on the value of x. You may use constants, but only 8 bit constants.
You can cast all you want. You're not supposed to use extra variables, but in
the end, it won't really matter, using vars just makes things cleaner. You
should be able to reduce your solution to a single line in the end though that
requires no extra vars.
85. You have an abstract computer, so just forget everything you know about
computers, this one only does what I'm about to tell you it does. You can use as
many variables as you need, there are no negative numbers, all numbers are
integers. You do not know the size of the integers, they could be infinitely
large, so you can't count on truncating at any point. There are NO comparisons
allowed, no if statements or anything like that. There are only four operations
you can do on a variable.
1) You can set a variable to 0.
2) You can set a variable = another variable.
3) You can increment a variable (only by 1), and it's a post increment.
4) You can loop. So, if you were to say loop(v1) and v1 = 10, your loop would
execute 10 times, but the value in v1 wouldn't change so the first line in the
loop can change value of v1 without changing the number of times you loop.
You need to do 3 things.
1) Write a function that decrements by 1.
2) Write a function that subtracts one variable from another.
3) Write a function that divides one variable by another.
4) See if you can implement all 3 using at most 4 variables. Meaning, you're not
making function calls now, you're making macros. And at most you can have 4
variables. The restriction really only applies to divide, the other 2 are easy
to do with 4 vars or less. Division on the other hand is dependent on the other
2 functions, so, if subtract requires 3 variables, then divide only has 1
variable left unchanged after a call to subtract. Basically, just make your
function calls to decrement and subtract so you pass your vars in by reference,
and you can't declare any new variables in a function, what you pass in is all
it gets.
Linked lists
* 86. Under what circumstances can one delete an element from a singly linked
list in constant time?
ANS. If the list is circular and there are no references to the nodes in the
list from anywhere else! Just copy the contents of the next node and delete the
next node. If the list is not circular, we can delete any but the last node
using this idea. In that case, mark the last node as dummy!
* 87. Given a singly linked list, determine whether it contains a loop or not.
ANS. (a) Start reversing the list. If you reach the head, gotcha! there is a
loop!
But this changes the list. So, reverse the list again.
(b) Maintain two pointers, initially pointing to the head. Advance one of them
one node at a time. And the other one, two nodes at a time. If the latter
overtakes the former at any time, there is a loop!
p1 = p2 = head;
do {
p1 = p1->next;
p2 = p2->next->next;
} while (p1 != p2);
88. Given a singly linked list, print out its contents in reverse order. Can you
do it without using any extra space?
ANS. Start reversing the list. Do this again, printing the contents.
89. Given a binary tree with nodes, print out the values in
pre-order/in-order/post-order without using any extra space.
90. Reverse a singly linked list recursively. The function prototype is node *
reverse (node *) ;
ANS.
node * reverse (node * n)
{
node * m ;
if (! (n && n -> next))
return n ;
m = reverse (n -> next) ;
n -> next -> next = n ;
n -> next = NULL ;
return m ;
}
91. Given a singly linked list, find the middle of the list.
HINT. Use the single and double pointer jumping. Maintain two pointers,
initially pointing to the head. Advance one of them one node at a time. And the
other one, two nodes at a time. When the double reaches the end, the single is
in the middle. This is not asymptotically faster but seems to take less steps
than going through the list twice.
Bit-manipulation
92. Reverse the bits of an unsigned integer.
ANS.
#define reverse(x) \
(x=x>>16|(0x0000ffff&x)<<16, \
x=(0xff00ff00&x)>>8|(0x00ff00ff&x)<<8, \
x=(0xf0f0f0f0&x)>>4|(0x0f0f0f0f&x)<<4, \
x=(0xcccccccc&x)>>2|(0x33333333&x)<<2, \
x=(0xaaaaaaaa&x)>>1|(0x55555555&x)<<1)
* 93. Compute the number of ones in an unsigned integer.
ANS.
#define count_ones(x) \
(x=(0xaaaaaaaa&x)>>1+(0x55555555&x), \
x=(0xcccccccc&x)>>2+(0x33333333&x), \
x=(0xf0f0f0f0&x)>>4+(0x0f0f0f0f&x), \
x=(0xff00ff00&x)>>8+(0x00ff00ff&x), \
x=x>>16+(0x0000ffff&x))
94. Compute the discrete log of an unsigned integer.
ANS.
#define discrete_log(h) \
(h=(h>>1)|(h>>2), \
h|=(h>>2), \
h|=(h>>4), \
h|=(h>>8), \
h|=(h>>16), \
h=(0xaaaaaaaa&h)>>1+(0x55555555&h), \
h=(0xcccccccc&h)>>2+(0x33333333&h), \
h=(0xf0f0f0f0&h)>>4+(0x0f0f0f0f&h), \
h=(0xff00ff00&h)>>8+(0x00ff00ff&h), \
h=(h>>16)+(0x0000ffff&h))
If I understand it right, log2(2) =1, log2(3)=1, log2(4)=2..... But this macro
does not work out log2(0) which does not exist! How do you think it should be
handled?
* 95. How do we test most simply if an unsigned integer is a power of two?
ANS. #define power_of_two(x) \ ((x)&&(~(x&(x-1))))
96. Set the highest significant bit of an unsigned integer to zero.
ANS. (from Denis Zabavchik) Set the highest significant bit of an unsigned
integer to zero
#define zero_most_significant(h) \
(h&=(h>>1)|(h>>2), \
h|=(h>>2), \
h|=(h>>4), \
h|=(h>>8), \
h|=(h>>16))
97. Let f(k) = y where k is the y-th number in the increasing sequence of
non-negative integers with the same number of ones in its binary representation
as y, e.g. f(0) = 1, f(1) = 1, f(2) = 2, f(3) = 1, f(4) = 3, f(5) = 2, f(6) = 3
and so on. Given k >= 0, compute f(k).
Others
98. A character set has 1 and 2 byte characters. One byte characters have 0 as
the first bit. You just keep accumulating the characters in a buffer. Suppose at
some point the user types a backspace, how can you remove the character
efficiently. (Note: You cant store the last character typed because the user can
type in arbitrarily many backspaces)
99. What is the simples way to check if the sum of two unsigned integers has
resulted in an overflow.
100. How do you represent an n-ary tree? Write a program to print the nodes of
such a tree in breadth first order.
101. Write the 'tr' program of UNIX. Invoked as
tr -str1 -str2. It reads stdin and prints it out to stdout, replacing every
occurance of str1[i] with str2[i].
e.g. tr -abc -xyz
to be and not to be <- input
to ye xnd not to ye <- output

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