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44 - Data Structure & Algorithms - Tower of Hanoi

Data Structure & Algorithms - Tower of Hanoi in c++

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
38 views4 pages

44 - Data Structure & Algorithms - Tower of Hanoi

Data Structure & Algorithms - Tower of Hanoi in c++

Uploaded by

laraib
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Data Structure & Algorithms -

Tower of Hanoi

Bhabani Shankar Pradhan


Tower of Hanoi, is a mathematical puzzle which consists of three towers (pegs) and
more than one rings is as depicted −

These rings are of different sizes and stacked upon in an ascending order, i.e. the
smaller one sits over the larger one. There are other variations of the puzzle where
the number of disks increase, but the tower count remains the same.

Rules

The mission is to move all the disks to some another tower without violating the
sequence of arrangement. A few rules to be followed for Tower of Hanoi are −

 Only one disk can be moved among the towers at any given time.
 Only the "top" disk can be removed.
 No large disk can sit over a small disk.

Following is an animated representation of solving a Tower of Hanoi puzzle with


three disks.

Tower of Hanoi puzzle with n disks can be solved in minimum 2n−1 steps. This
presentation shows that a puzzle with 3 disks has taken 23 - 1 = 7 steps.

Algorithm

To write an algorithm for Tower of Hanoi, first we need to learn how to solve this
problem with lesser amount of disks, say → 1 or 2. We mark three towers with
name, source, destination and aux (only to help moving the disks). If we have only
one disk, then it can easily be moved from source to destination peg.

If we have 2 disks −

 First, we move the smaller (top) disk to aux peg.


 Then, we move the larger (bottom) disk to destination peg.
 And finally, we move the smaller disk from aux to destination peg.

So now, we are in a position to design an algorithm for Tower of Hanoi with more
than two disks. We divide the stack of disks in two parts. The largest disk (nth disk) is
in one part and all other (n-1) disks are in the second part.

Our ultimate aim is to move disk n from source to destination and then put all other
(n1) disks onto it. We can imagine to apply the same in a recursive way for all given
set of disks.

The steps to follow are −

Step 1 − Move n-1 disks from source to aux


Step 2 − Move nth disk from source to dest
Step 3 − Move n-1 disks from aux to dest

A recursive algorithm for Tower of Hanoi can be driven as follows −

START
Procedure Hanoi(disk, source, dest, aux)

IF disk == 1, THEN
move disk from source to dest
ELSE
Hanoi(disk - 1, source, aux, dest) // Step 1
move disk from source to dest // Step 2
Hanoi(disk - 1, aux, dest, source) // Step 3
END IF

END Procedure
STOP

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