C++ interview questions

Top most important C++ interview questions and answers by Experts

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1.What is Boyce Codd Normal form? 
A relation schema R is in BCNF with respect to a set F of functional dependencies if for all functional dependencies in F+ of the form a-> , where a and b is a subset of R, at least one of the following holds:
* a- > b is a trivial functional dependency (b is a subset of a)
* a is a superkey for schema R

2.What is virtual class and friend class? 
Friend classes are used when two or more classes are designed to work together and need access to each other’s implementation in ways that the rest of the world shouldn’t be allowed to have. In other words, they help keep private things private. For instance, it may be desirable for class DatabaseCursor to have more privilege to the internals of class Database than main() has.

3.What is the word you will use when defining a function in base class to allow this function to be a polimorphic function? 
virtual 

4.What do you mean by binding of data and functions? 
Encapsulation.

5.What are 2 ways of exporting a function from a DLL?
1.Taking a reference to the function from the DLL instance.

2. Using the DLL ’s Type Library

6.What is the difference between an object and a class? 
Classes and objects are separate but related concepts. Every object belongs to a class and every class contains one or more related objects.
– A Class is static. All of the attributes of a class are fixed before, during, and after the execution of a program. The attributes of a class don’t change.
– The class to which an object belongs is also (usually) static. If a particular object belongs to a certain class at the time that it is created then it almost certainly will still belong to that class right up until the time that it is destroyed.
– An Object on the other hand has a limited lifespan. Objects are created and eventually destroyed. Also during that lifetime, the attributes of the object may undergo significant change.

7.Suppose that data is an array of 1000 integers. Write a single function call that will sort the 100 elements data [222] through data [321]. 
quicksort ((data + 222), 100); 

8.What is a class? 
Class is a user-defined data type in C++. It can be created to solve a particular kind of problem. After creation the user need not know the specifics of the working of a class.

9.What is friend function? 
As the name suggests, the function acts as a friend to a class. As a friend of a class, it can access its private and protected members. A friend function is not a member of the class. But it must be listed in the class definition.

10.Which recursive sorting technique always makes recursive calls to sort subarrays that are about half size of the original array? 
Mergesort always makes recursive calls to sort subarrays that are about half size of the original array, resulting in O(n log n) time.

11.What is abstraction? 
Abstraction is of the process of hiding unwanted details from the user.

12.What are virtual functions? 
A virtual function allows derived classes to replace the implementation provided by the base class. The compiler makes sure the replacement is always called whenever the object in question is actually of the derived class, even if the object is accessed by a base pointer rather than a derived pointer. This allows algorithms in the base class to be replaced in the derived class, even if users don’t know about the derived class.

13.What is the difference between an external iterator and an internal iterator? Describe an advantage of an external iterator. 
An internal iterator is implemented with member functions of the class that has items to step through. .An external iterator is implemented as a separate class that can be “attach” to the object that has items to step through. .An external iterator has the advantage that many difference iterators can be active simultaneously on the same object. 

14.What is a scope resolution operator? 
A scope resolution operator (::), can be used to define the member functions of a class outside the class.

15.What do you mean by pure virtual functions? 
A pure virtual member function is a member function that the base class forces derived classes to provide. Normally these member functions have no implementation. Pure virtual functions are equated to zero.
class Shape { public: virtual void draw() = 0; };

16.What is polymorphism? Explain with an example? 
“Poly” means “many” and “morph” means “form”. Polymorphism is the ability of an object (or reference) to assume (be replaced by) or become many different forms of object.
Example: function overloading, function overriding, virtual functions. Another example can be a plus ‘+’ sign, used for adding two integers or for using it to concatenate two strings.

17.What’s the output of the following program? Why?
#include <stdio.h>

main()
{
typedef union
{
int a;
char b[10];
float c;
}
Union;

Union x,y = {100};
x.a = 50;
strcpy(x.b,\”hello\”);
x.c = 21.50;

printf(\”Union x : %d %s %f \n\”,x.a,x.b,x.c );
printf(\”Union y :%d %s%f \n\”,y.a,y.b,y.c);
}

Given inputs X, Y, Z and operations | and & (meaning bitwise OR and AND, respectively)
What is output equal to in 
output = (X & Y) | (X & Z) | (Y & Z)

18.Why are arrays usually processed with for loop? 
The real power of arrays comes from their facility of using an index variable to traverse the array, accessing each element with the same expression a[i]. All the is needed to make this work is a iterated statement in which the variable i serves as a counter, incrementing from 0 to a.length -1. That is exactly what a loop does.

19.What is an HTML tag? 
Answer: An HTML tag is a syntactical construct in the HTML language that abbreviates specific instructions to be executed when the HTML script is loaded into a Web browser. It is like a method in Java, a function in C++, a procedure in Pascal, or a subroutine in FORTRAN.

20.Explain which of the following declarations will compile and what will be constant – a pointer or the value pointed at: * const char * 
* char const *
* char * const 

Note: Ask the candidate whether the first declaration is pointing to a string or a single character. Both explanations are correct, but if he says that it’s a single character pointer, ask why a whole string is initialized as char* in C++. If he says this is a string declaration, ask him to declare a pointer to a single character. Competent candidates should not have problems pointing out why const char* can be both a character and a string declaration, incompetent ones will come up with invalid reasons.

21.You’re given a simple code for the class Bank Customer. Write the following functions: 
* Copy constructor
* = operator overload
* == operator overload
* + operator overload (customers’ balances should be added up, as an example of joint account between husband and wife) 

Note:Anyone confusing assignment and equality operators should be dismissed from the interview. The applicant might make a mistake of passing by value, not by reference. The candidate might also want to return a pointer, not a new object, from the addition operator. Slightly hint that you’d like the value to be changed outside the function, too, in the first case. Ask him whether the statement customer3 = customer1 + customer2 would work in the second case.

22.What problems might the following macro bring to the application? 
#define sq(x) x*x

23.Anything wrong with this code?
T *p = new T[10]; 
delete p; 

Everything is correct, Only the first element of the array will be deleted”, The entire array will be deleted, but only the first element destructor will be called.

24.Anything wrong with this code?
T *p = 0;
delete p; 

Yes, the program will crash in an attempt to delete a null pointer.

25.How do you decide which integer type to use? 
It depends on our requirement. When we are required an integer to be stored in 1 byte (means less than or equal to 255) we use short int, for 2 bytes we use int, for 8 bytes we use long int. 

A char is for 1-byte integers, a short is for 2-byte integers, an int is generally a 2-byte or 4-byte integer (though not necessarily), a long is a 4-byte integer, and a long long is a 8-byte integer.

26.What does extern mean in a function declaration?
Using extern in a function declaration we can make a function such that it can used outside the file in which it is defined. 

An extern variable, function definition, or declaration also makes the described variable or function usable by the succeeding part of the current source file. This declaration does not replace the definition. The declaration is used to describe the variable that is externally defined. 

If a declaration for an identifier already exists at file scope, any extern declaration of the same identifier found within a block refers to that same object. If no other declaration for the identifier exists at file scope, the identifier has external linkage.

27.What can I safely assume about the initial values of variables which are not explicitly initialized? 
It depends on complier which may assign any garbage value to a variable if it is not initialized.

28.What is the difference between char a[] = “string”; and char *p = “string”;? 
In the first case 6 bytes are allocated to the variable a which is fixed, where as in the second case if *p is assigned to some other value the allocate memory can change.

29.What’s the auto keyword good for? 
Answer1
Not much. It declares an object with automatic storage duration. Which means the object will be destroyed at the end of the objects scope. All variables in functions that are not declared as static and not dynamically allocated have automatic storage duration by default. 

For example
int main()
{
int a; //this is the same as writing “auto int a;”

Answer2
Local variables occur within a scope; they are “local” to a function. They are often called automatic variables because they automatically come into being when the scope is entered and automatically go away when the scope closes. The keyword auto makes this explicit, but local variables default to auto auto auto auto so it is never necessary to declare something as an auto auto auto auto.

30.What is indirection?
In C when we use variable name to access the value it is direct access. If we use pointer to get the variable value, it is indirection.

31.What is the difference between char a[] = “string”; and char *p = “string”; ? 
Answer1
a[] = “string”;
char *p = “string”;

The difference is this:
p is pointing to a constant string, you can never safely say
p[3]=’x’;
however you can always say a[3]=’x’;

char a[]=”string”; – character array initialization.
char *p=”string” ; – non-const pointer to a const-string.( this is permitted only in the case of char pointer in C++ to preserve backward compatibility with C.) 

Answer2
a[] = “string”;
char *p = “string”;

a[] will have 7 bytes. However, p is only 4 bytes. P is pointing to an adress is either BSS or the data section (depending on which compiler — GNU for the former and CC for the latter). 

Answer3
char a[] = “string”;
char *p = “string”;

for char a[]…….using the array notation 7 bytes of storage in the static memory block are taken up, one for each character and one for the terminating nul character. 

But, in the pointer notation char *p………….the same 7 bytes required, plus N bytes to store the pointer variable “p” (where N depends on the system but is usually a minimum of 2 bytes and can be 4 or more)……

32.How do I declare an array of N pointers to functions returning pointers to functions returning pointers to characters? 
Answer1
If you want the code to be even slightly readable, you will use typedefs. 
typedef char* (*functiontype_one)(void);
typedef functiontype_one (*functiontype_two)(void);
functiontype_two myarray[N]; //assuming N is a const integral 

Answer2
char* (* (*a[N])())()
Here a is that array. And according to question no function will not take any parameter value.

33.What does extern mean in a function declaration? 
It tells the compiler that a variable or a function exists, even if the compiler hasn’t yet seen it in the file currently being compiled. This variable or function may be defined in another file or further down in the current file.

34.How do I initialize a pointer to a function?
This is the way to initialize a pointer to a function

void fun(int a)
{

}

void main()
{
void (*fp)(int);
fp=fun;
fp(1);

}

35.How do you link a C++ program to C functions? 
By using the extern “C” linkage specification around the C function declarations.

36.Explain the scope resolution operator. 
It permits a program to reference an identifier in the global scope that has been hidden by another identifier with the same name in the local scope.

37.What are the differences between a C++ struct and C++ class? 
The default member and base-class access specifier are different.

38.How many ways are there to initialize an int with a constant? 
Two. 
There are two formats for initializers in C++ as shown in the example that follows. The first format uses the traditional C notation. The second format uses constructor notation. 
int foo = 123;
int bar (123);

39.How does throwing and catching exceptions differ from using setjmp and longjmp? 
The throw operation calls the destructors for automatic objects instantiated since entry to the try block.

40,What is a default constructor? 
Default constructor WITH arguments class B { public: B (int m = 0) : n (m) {} int n; }; int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { B b; return 0; }

41.What is a conversion constructor? 
A constructor that accepts one argument of a different type.

42.What is the difference between a copy constructor and an overloaded assignment operator? 
A copy constructor constructs a new object by using the content of the argument object. An overloaded assignment operator assigns the contents of an existing object to another existing object of the same class.

43.When should you use multiple inheritance? 
There are three acceptable answers: “Never,” “Rarely,” and “When the problem domain cannot be accurately modeled any other way.”

44.Explain the ISA and HASA class relationships. How would you implement each in a class design? 
A specialized class “is” a specialization of another class and, therefore, has the ISA relationship with the other class. An Employee ISA Person. This relationship is best implemented with inheritance. Employee is derived from Person. A class may have an instance of another class. For example, an employee “has” a salary, therefore the Employee class has the HASA relationship with the Salary class. This relationship is best implemented by embedding an object of the Salary class in the Employee class.

45.When is a template a better solution than a base class? 
When you are designing a generic class to contain or otherwise manage objects of other types, when the format and behavior of those other types are unimportant to their containment or management, and particularly when those other types are unknown (thus, the generosity) to the designer of the container or manager class.

46.What is a mutable member? 
One that can be modified by the class even when the object of the class or the member function doing the modification is const.

47.What is an explicit constructor? 
A conversion constructor declared with the explicit keyword. The compiler does not use an explicit constructor to implement an implied conversion of types. It’s purpose is reserved explicitly for construction.

48.What is the Standard Template Library (STL)?
A library of container templates approved by the ANSI committee for inclusion in the standard C++ specification. 

A programmer who then launches into a discussion of the generic programming model, iterators, allocators, algorithms, and such, has a higher than average understanding of the new technology that STL brings to C++ programming.

49.Describe run-time type identification.
The ability to determine at run time the type of an object by using the typeid operator or the dynamic_cast operator.

50.What problem does the namespace feature solve? 
Multiple providers of libraries might use common global identifiers causing a name collision when an application tries to link with two or more such libraries. The namespace feature surrounds a library’s external declarations with a unique namespace that eliminates the potential for those collisions. 
This solution assumes that two library vendors don’t use the same namespace identifier, of course.

51.Are there any new intrinsic (built-in) data types? 
Yes. The ANSI committee added the bool intrinsic type and its true and false value keywords.

52.Will the following program execute?
void main()
{
void *vptr = (void *) malloc(sizeof(void));
vptr++;
}

Answer1
It will throw an error, as arithmetic operations cannot be performed on void pointers. 

Answer2
It will not build as sizeof cannot be applied to void* ( error “Unknown size” ) 

Answer3
How can it execute if it won’t even compile? It needs to be int main, not void main. Also, cannot increment a void *. 

Answer4
According to gcc compiler it won’t show any error, simply it executes. but in general we can’t do arthematic operation on void, and gives size of void as 1 

Answer5
The program compiles in GNU C while giving a warning for “void main”. The program runs without a crash. sizeof(void) is “1? hence when vptr++, the address is incremented by 1. 

Answer6
Regarding arguments about GCC, be aware that this is a C++ question, not C. So gcc will compile and execute, g++ cannot. g++ complains that the return type cannot be void and the argument of sizeof() cannot be void. It also reports that ISO C++ forbids incrementing a pointer of type ‘void*’. 

Answer7
in C++
voidp.c: In function `int main()’:
voidp.c:4: error: invalid application of `sizeof’ to a void type
voidp.c:4: error: `malloc’ undeclared (first use this function)
voidp.c:4: error: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once for each function it appears in.)
voidp.c:6: error: ISO C++ forbids incrementing a pointer of type `void*’

But in c, it work without problems

53.void main()
{
char *cptr = 0?2000;
long *lptr = 0?2000;
cptr++;
lptr++;
printf(” %x %x”, cptr, lptr);
}

Will it execute or not?

Answer1
For Q2: As above, won’t compile because main must return int. Also, 0×2000 cannot be implicitly converted to a pointer (I assume you meant 0×2000 and not 0?2000.) 

Answer2
Not Excute.
Compile with VC7 results following errors:
error C2440: ‘initializing’ : cannot convert from ‘int’ to ‘char *’
error C2440: ‘initializing’ : cannot convert from ‘int’ to ‘long *’

Not Excute if it is C++, but Excute in C.
The printout:
2001 2004 

Answer3
In C++
[$]> g++ point.c
point.c: In function `int main()’:
point.c:4: error: invalid conversion from `int’ to `char*’
point.c:5: error: invalid conversion from `int’ to `long int*’ 

in C
———————————–
[$] etc > gcc point.c
point.c: In function `main’:
point.c:4: warning: initialization makes pointer from integer without a cast
point.c:5: warning: initialization makes pointer from integer without a cast
[$] etc > ./a.exe
2001 2004

54.What is the difference between Mutex and Binary semaphore?
semaphore is used to synchronize processes. where as mutex is used to provide synchronization between threads running in the same process. 

55.In C++, what is the difference between method overloading and method overriding? 
Overloading a method (or function) in C++ is the ability for functions of the same name to be defined as long as these methods have different signatures (different set of parameters). Method overriding is the ability of the inherited class rewriting the virtual method of the base class.

56.What methods can be overridden in Java? 
In C++ terminology, all public methods in Java are virtual. Therefore, all Java methods can be overwritten in subclasses except those that are declared final, static, and private.

57.What are the defining traits of an object-oriented language? 
The defining traits of an object-oriented langauge are:
* encapsulation
* inheritance
* polymorphism

58.Write a program that ask for user input from 5 to 9 then calculate the average 
int main()
{
int MAX=4;
int total =0;
int average=0;
int numb;
cout<<“Please enter your input from 5 to 9”;
cin>>numb;
if((numb <5)&&(numb>9))
cout<<“please re type your input”;
else
for(i=0;i<=MAX; i++)
{
total = total + numb;
average= total /MAX;
}
cout<<“The average number is”<<average<<endl;

return 0;
}

59.Assignment Operator – What is the diffrence between a “assignment operator” and a “copy constructor”? 
Answer1. 
In assignment operator, you are assigning a value to an existing object. But in copy constructor, you are creating a new object and then assigning a value to that object. For example: 
complex c1,c2;
c1=c2; //this is assignment
complex c3=c2; //copy constructor

Answer2. 
A copy constructor is used to initialize a newly declared variable from an existing variable. This makes a deep copy like assignment, but it is somewhat simpler: 

There is no need to test to see if it is being initialized from itself. 
There is no need to clean up (eg, delete) an existing value (there is none). 
A reference to itself is not returned.

60.RTTI – What is RTTI? 
Answer1. 
RTTI stands for “Run Time Type Identification”. In an inheritance hierarchy, we can find out the exact type of the objet of which it is member. It can be done by using: 

1) dynamic id operator 
2) typecast operator 

Answer2. 
RTTI is defined as follows: Run Time Type Information, a facility that allows an object to be queried at runtime to determine its type. One of the fundamental principles of object technology is polymorphism, which is the ability of an object to dynamically change at runtime.

61.STL Containers – What are the types of STL containers? 
There are 3 types of STL containers: 

1. Adaptive containers like queue, stack 
2. Associative containers like set, map 
3. Sequence containers like vector, deque

62.What is the need for a Virtual Destructor ? 
Destructors are declared as virtual because if do not declare it as virtual the base class destructor will be called before the derived class destructor and that will lead to memory leak because derived class’s objects will not get freed.Destructors are declared virtual so as to bind objects to the methods at runtime so that appropriate destructor is called.

63.What is “mutable”?
Answer1. 

“mutable” is a C++ keyword. When we declare const, none of its data members can change. When we want one of its members to change, we declare it as mutable. 

Answer2. 
A “mutable” keyword is useful when we want to force a “logical const” data member to have its value modified. A logical const can happen when we declare a data member as non-const, but we have a const member function attempting to modify that data member. For example: 
class Dummy {
public:
bool isValid() const;
private:
mutable int size_ = 0;
mutable bool validStatus_ = FALSE; 
// logical const issue resolved
};

bool Dummy::isValid() const 
// data members become bitwise const
{
if (size > 10) {
validStatus_ = TRUE; // fine to assign
size = 0; // fine to assign
}
}

Answer2. 
“mutable” keyword in C++ is used to specify that the member may be updated or modified even if it is member of constant object. Example: 
class Animal {
private:
string name;
string food;
mutable int age;
public:
void set_age(int a);
};

void main() {
const Animal Tiger(’Fulffy’,’antelope’,1);
Tiger.set_age(2); 
// the age can be changed since its mutable
}

64.Differences of C and C++
Could you write a small program that will compile in C but not in C++ ? 

In C, if you can a const variable e.g. 
const int i = 2; 
you can use this variable in other module as follows 
extern const int i; 
C compiler will not complain. 

But for C++ compiler u must write 
extern const int i = 2; 
else error would be generated.

65.Bitwise Operations – Given inputs X, Y, Z and operations | and & (meaning bitwise OR and AND, respectively), what is output equal to in? 
output = (X & Y) | (X & Z) | (Y & Z);

66.What is a modifier? 
A modifier, also called a modifying function is a member function that changes the value of  at least one data member. In other words, an operation that modifies the state of an object. Modifiers are also known as ‘mutators’. Example: The function mod is a modifier in the following code snippet:

class test
{
int x,y;
public:
test()
{
x=0; y=0;
}
void mod()
{
x=10;
y=15;
}
};

67.What is an accessor? 
An accessor is a class operation that does not modify the state of an object. The accessor functions need to be declared as const operations

68.Differentiate between a template class and class template.
Template class: A generic definition or a parameterized class not instantiated until the client provides the needed information. It’s jargon for plain templates. Class template: A class template specifies how individual classes can be constructed much like the way a class specifies how individual objects can be constructed. It’s jargon for plain classes.

69.When does a name clash occur? 
A name clash occurs when a name is defined in more than one place. For example., two different class libraries could give two different classes the same name. If you try to use many class libraries at the same time, there is a fair chance that you will be unable to compile or link the program because of name clashes.

70.Define namespace. 
It is a feature in C++ to minimize name collisions in the global name space. This namespace keyword assigns a distinct name to a library that allows other libraries to use the same identifier names without creating any name collisions. Furthermore, the compiler uses the namespace signature for differentiating the definitions.

71.What is the use of ‘using’ declaration. ?
A using declaration makes it possible to use a name from a namespace without the scope operator.

72.What is an Iterator class ? 
A class that is used to traverse through the objects maintained by a container class. There are five categories of iterators: input iterators, output iterators, forward iterators, bidirectional iterators, random access. An iterator is an entity that gives access to the contents of a container object without violating encapsulation constraints. Access to the contents is granted on a one-at-a-time basis in order. The order can be storage order (as in lists and queues) or some arbitrary order (as in array indices) or according to some ordering relation (as in an ordered binary tree). The iterator is a construct, which provides an interface that, when called, yields either the next element in the container, or some value denoting the fact that there are no more elements to examine. Iterators hide the details of access to and update of the elements of a container class.
The simplest and safest iterators are those that permit read-only access to the contents of a container class. 

73.What is an incomplete type? 
Incomplete types refers to pointers in which there is non availability of the implementation of the referenced location or it points to some location whose value is not available for modification. 

int *i=0x400 // i points to address 400
*i=0; //set the value of memory location pointed by i. 

Incomplete types are otherwise called uninitialized pointers.

74.What is a dangling pointer? 
A dangling pointer arises when you use the address of an object after
its lifetime is over. This may occur in situations like returning
addresses of the automatic variables from a function or using the
address of the memory block after it is freed. The following
code snippet shows this:

class Sample
{
public:
int *ptr;
Sample(int i)
{
ptr = new int(i);
}

~Sample()
{
delete ptr;
}
void PrintVal()
{
cout << “The value is ” << *ptr;
}
};

void SomeFunc(Sample x)
{
cout << “Say i am in someFunc ” << endl;
}

int main()
{
Sample s1 = 10;
SomeFunc(s1);
s1.PrintVal();
}

In the above example when PrintVal() function is
called it is called by the pointer that has been freed by the
destructor in SomeFunc.

75.Differentiate between the message and method.
Message:

* Objects communicate by sending messages to each other.
* A message is sent to invoke a method.

Method
* Provides response to a message.
* It is an implementation of an operation.

76.What is an adaptor class or Wrapper class? 
A class that has no functionality of its own. Its member functions hide the use of a third party software component or an object with the non-compatible interface or a non-object-oriented implementation.

77.What is a Null object? 
It is an object of some class whose purpose is to indicate that a real object of that class does not exist. One common use for a null object is a return value from a member function that is supposed to return an object with some specified properties but cannot find such an object. 

78.What is class invariant? 
A class invariant is a condition that defines all valid states for an object. It is a logical condition to ensure the correct working of a class. Class invariants must hold when an object is created, and they must be preserved under all operations of the class. In particular all class invariants are both preconditions and post-conditions for all operations or member functions of the class.

79.What do you mean by Stack unwinding? 
It is a process during exception handling when the destructor is called for all local objects between the place where the exception was thrown and where it is caught.

80.Define precondition and post-condition to a member function. 
Precondition: A precondition is a condition that must be true on entry to a member function. A class is used correctly if preconditions are never false. An operation is not responsible for doing anything sensible if its precondition fails to hold. For example, the interface invariants of stack class say nothing about pushing yet another element on a stack that is already full. We say that isful() is a precondition of the push operation. Post-condition: A post-condition is a condition that must be true on exit from a member function if the precondition was valid on entry to that function. A class is implemented correctly if post-conditions are never false. For example, after pushing an element on the stack, we know that isempty() must necessarily hold. This is a post-condition of the push operation.

81.What are the conditions that have to be met for a condition to be an invariant of the class? 
* The condition should hold at the end of every constructor.
* The condition should hold at the end of every mutator (non-const) operation.

82.What are proxy objects? 
Objects that stand for other objects are called proxy objects or surrogates. 
template <class t=””>
class Array2D
{
public:
class Array1D
{
public:
T& operator[] (int index);
const T& operator[] (int index)const;
};

Array1D operator[] (int index);
const Array1D operator[] (int index) const;
};

The following then becomes legal:

Array2D<float>data(10,20);
cout<<data[3][6]; // fine

Here data[3] yields an Array1D object and the operator [] invocation on that object yields the float in position(3,6) of the original two dimensional array. Clients of the Array2D class need not be aware of the presence of the Array1D class. Objects of this latter class stand for one-dimensional array objects that, conceptually, do not exist for clients of Array2D. Such clients program as if they were using real, live, two-dimensional arrays. Each Array1D object stands for a one-dimensional array that is absent from a conceptual model used by the clients of Array2D. In the above example, Array1D is a proxy class. Its instances stand for one-dimensional arrays that, conceptually, do not exist.

83.Name some pure object oriented languages. 
Smalltalk, Java, Eiffel, Sather. 

84.What is an orthogonal base class? 
If two base classes have no overlapping methods or data they are said to be independent of, or orthogonal to each other. Orthogonal in the sense means that two classes operate in different dimensions and do not interfere with each other in any way. The same derived class may inherit such classes with no difficulty.

85.What is a node class?
A node class is a class that,

* relies on the base class for services and implementation,
* provides a wider interface to the users than its base class,
* relies primarily on virtual functions in its public interface
* depends on all its direct and indirect base class
* can be understood only in the context of the base class
* can be used as base for further derivation
* can be used to create objects.
A node class is a class that has added new services or functionality beyond the services inherited from its base class.

86.What is a container class? What are the types of container classes? 
A container class is a class that is used to hold objects in memory or external storage. A container class acts as a generic holder. A container class has a predefined behavior and a well-known interface. A container class is a supporting class whose purpose is to hide the topology used for maintaining the list of objects in memory. When a container class contains a group of mixed objects, the container is called a heterogeneous container; when the container is holding a group of objects that are all the same, the container is called a homogeneous container.

87.How do you write a function that can reverse a linked-list? 
Answer1:

void reverselist(void)
{
if(head==0)
return;
if(head-<next==0)
return;
if(head-<next==tail)
{
head-<next = 0;
tail-<next = head;
}
else
{
node* pre = head;
node* cur = head-<next;
node* curnext = cur-<next;
head-<next = 0;
cur-<next = head;

for(; curnext!=0; )
{
cur-<next = pre;
pre = cur;
cur = curnext;
curnext = curnext-<next;
}

curnext-<next = cur;
}
}

Answer2:

node* reverselist(node* head)
{
if(0==head || 0==head->next) 
//if head->next ==0 should return head instead of 0;
return 0;

{
node* prev = head;
node* curr = head->next;
node* next = curr->next;

for(; next!=0; )
{
curr->next = prev;
prev = curr;
curr = next;
next = next->next;
}
curr->next = prev;

head->next = 0;
head = curr;
}

return head;
}

88.What is polymorphism? 
Polymorphism is the idea that a base class can be inherited by several classes. A base class pointer can point to its child class and a base class array can store different child class objects.

89.How do you find out if a linked-list has an end? (i.e. the list is not a cycle) 
You can find out by using 2 pointers. One of them goes 2 nodes each time. The second one goes at 1 nodes each time. If there is a cycle, the one that goes 2 nodes each time will eventually meet the one that goes slower. If that is the case, then you will know the linked-list is a cycle.

90.How can you tell what shell you are running on UNIX system?
You can do the Echo $RANDOM. It will return a undefined variable if you are from the C-Shell, just a return prompt if you are from the Bourne shell, and a 5 digit random numbers if you are from the Korn shell. You could also do a ps -l and look for the shell with the highest PID.

91.What is Boyce Codd Normal form? 
A relation schema R is in BCNF with respect to a set F of functional dependencies if for all functional dependencies in F+ of the form a->b, where a and b is a subset of R, at least one of the following holds: 

* a->b is a trivial functional dependency (b is a subset of a)
* a is a superkey for schema R

92.What is pure virtual function? 
A class is made abstract by declaring one or more of its virtual functions to be pure. A pure virtual function is one with an initializer of = 0 in its declaration 

93.Write a Struct Time where integer m, h, s are its members 
struct Time
{
int m;
int h;
int s;
};

94.How do you traverse a Btree in Backward in-order? 
Process the node in the right subtree
Process the root
Process the node in the left subtree

95.What is the two main roles of Operating System? 
As a resource manager
As a virtual machine

96.In the derived class, which data member of the base class are visible? 
In the public and protected sections.

97.Could you tell something about the Unix System Kernel? 
The kernel is the heart of the UNIX openrating system, it’s reponsible for controlling the computer’s resouces and scheduling user jobs so that each one gets its fair share of resources.

98.What are each of the standard files and what are they normally associated with? 
They are the standard input file, the standard output file and the standard error file. The first is usually associated with the keyboard, the second and third are usually associated with the terminal screen.