Data Structures and Algorithm
Data structure and Algorithm (DSA)
Explanations
Contribution Guidelines
1. Contribution Specifications
The problem being contributed must either be a simple file (Eg. kruskal-algorithm.cpp
, linear-search.java
) or a more complex directory (palindrome/
). This is a unit problem
.
The directory tree has the following convention of algorithms/{language}/{category}/{problem}
, where {language}
represents the language code of the problem (Eg. CPlusPlus
for C++, CSharp
for C# etc.), {category}
is the topic or category of the problem being contributed (Eg. strings
, sorting
, linked-lists
etc.), and {problem}
is a conforming name to the problem (Eg. linear-search.cpp
, palindrome
, queue-linked-list.cpp
etc.)
A unit problem
must conform to the following specifications:
- The name should be in lowercase. (Eg.
palindrome/
,binary-search.cpp
etc.). - Each word must be separated by a dash or a hyphen (
-
).
If you have a problem that belongs to a new topic or category than one which are present:
- Create a new folder and an index for it inside (a readme,
README.md
file). - To each new index file, write the readme with your
problem
in it (Markdown Documentation). - The folder name can also only contain lowercase characters and dashes or hyphens (
-
) (Eg.strings
sorting
etc.)
Simple (File) Contributions
The file should conform to the problem
specification, and the extension (Eg. linear-search.java
, kruskal-algorithm.cpp
, count-inversions.js
etc.)
Project/Folder-based Contributions
The project and folder-based contributions have a bit more stricter contribution contribution specifications.
The folder should conform to the problem
specification, along with the following specifications
Folder Structure
problem-name\
| - .gitignore
| - README.md
| - Makefile # or the specific specification/requirements/configuration file
| - src\
| - main.ext
README.md
Specification / Template
# <Title of the Problem>
< description of the problem >
## Prerequisites
- prerequisite library or package
- [prerequisite library](https://www.example.com/link-to-official-library)
## Instructions
- instructions to run the project
- < Simple and reproducible commands to execute the project >
```bash
make # or 'cargo run', or 'dotnet run' or 'mvn exec:java' etc.
```
## Test Cases & Output < if exists>
< If you can provide test cases, describe it here, else remove this section >
.gitignore
File
# add all output files and build files to be excluded from git tracking
main # executable file also must have the project name
target/ # the build file, for example for rust
Build File / Specification File / Configuration File
It can be any of the following ones
- C/C++:
Makefile
- Python:
requirements.txt
- JavaScript:
package.json
andpackage-lock.json
- Rust:
Cargo.toml
andCargo.lock
- Go:
go.mod
Source Code File
The source code files, should either be in src/
folder (Eg. src/main.cpp
or src/main.js
) or the root folder (Eg. palindrome.go
or App.java
) where ext
is the file extension for the specific programming language.
Again, the source codes must conform to a valid file structure convention that the programming language enforces.
2. Naming Convention
The programming should keep the naming convention rule of each programming language.
Other topic
Reviewers
Programming Language | Users |
---|---|
C or C++ | @Arsenic-ATG, @UG-SEP, @aayushjain7, @Ashborn-SM, @Ashad001 |
Java | @TawfikYasser, @aayushjain7, @mohitchakraverty |
C# | @ming-tsai, @Waqar-107 |
Go | @ayo-ajayi |
Python | @Arsenic-ATG, @sridhar-5 |
JavaScript | @ming-tsai |