| # | Problem | Pass Rate (passed user / total user) |
|---|---|---|
| 10998 | Stack |
|
Description
A stack is an abstract data type that serves as a collection of elements, where a node can be added to a stack and removed from a stack only at its top. Two principal operations can be used to manipulate a stack: push, which adds an element at the top, and pop, which removes the element at the top of the collection.

Let’s see how the stack data structure can be realized in C++.We have an approach to implement stack: linked list. Thus, we define a class as follows:
class List_stack {
public:
List_stack();
~List_stack();
void push(const int &);
void pop();
void print();
private:
ListNode *head;
ListNode *tail;
};
where List_stack implements the stack data structure
REQUIREMENTS:
Implement the constructor, destructor, push(), pop() and print() member functions of List_stack classes.
Note:
1.This problem involves three files.
- function.h: Class definitions.
- function.cpp: Member-function definitions.
- main.cpp: A driver program to test your class implementation.
You will be provided with main.cpp and function.h, and asked to implement function.cpp.
function.h
main.cpp
2.For OJ submission:
Step 1. Submit only your function.cpp into the submission block.
Step 2. Check the results and debug your program if necessary.
Input
There are three kinds of commands:
- “push integerA” represents adding an element with int value A at the top of the stack.
- “pop “ represents removing the element at the top of the stack.
- “print” represents showing the current content of the stack.
Each command is followed by a new line character.