Hi I\'m trying to rebuild a binary tree, I almost got it, except it throws me an error and I don\'t know why
buildTree :: (Ord a, Eq a) => [a] -> [a] ->
@chepner has spotted the error. If you'd like to know how to find and fix these sorts of errors yourself in the future, you may find the following answer helpful...
First, it helps to find the smallest test case possible. With a few tries, it's not hard to get your program to fail on a 2-node tree:
> buildTree [5,2] [2,5]
Node 5 (Node 2 Empty Empty) (Node *** Exception: Prelude.head: empty list
Now, try tracing the evaluation of buildTree [5,2] [2,5]
by hand. If you evaluate this first buildTree
call manually, you'll find the variables involved have values:
preOrd = [5,2]
inOrd = [2,5]
Just rootInd = Just 1
leftPreord = tail (take 2 [5,2]) = [2]
rightPreord = tail (drop 1 [5,2]) = []
leftInOrd = take 1 [2,5] = [2]
rigthInord = drop 2 [2,5] = []
root = 5
left = buildTree [2] [2]
right = buildTree [] [2]
Everything looks fine, except right
, which tries to build a tree with incompatible preorder and inorder lists. That's what causes the error, since buildTree [] [2]
tries to take the head
of an empty list. (The error message is a little different for your test case, but the underlying cause is the same.)
This pinpoints the problem as the second argument to buildTree
in the definition of right
-- the value 2
shouldn't be included in the (empty) right tree. From there, it's easy to spot and fix the typo in the definition of right
so it reads:
read = buildTree rigthPreOrd rightInOrd
After that fix, things seem to work okay.
The runtime is failing on this line:
Just rootInd = elemIndex root inOrd
elemIndex
is returning Nothing
when running your example input, but your code says it will always return a Just
, so the runtime crashes. You need to handle the case where elemIndex root inOrd
returns Nothing
.
Perhaps more importantly, you should enable all warnings with the -Wall flag to show up as compiler errors so that your code wouldn't compile to begin with.