Show data structure names in bold

This commit is contained in:
Antti H S Laaksonen 2017-04-18 20:12:07 +03:00
parent e256200528
commit 8dcb525de9
1 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -473,7 +473,7 @@ element that corresponds to $a$ or the previous element.
\index{bitset}
A \texttt{bitset} is an array
A \key{bitset} is an array
where each element is either 0 or 1.
For example, the following code creates
a bitset that contains 10 elements:
@ -528,7 +528,7 @@ cout << (a^b) << "\n"; // 1001101110
\index{deque}
A \texttt{deque} is a dynamic array
A \key{deque} is a dynamic array
whose size can be changed at both ends of the array.
Like a vector, a deque provides the functions
\texttt{push\_back} and \texttt{pop\_back}, but
@ -556,7 +556,7 @@ elements is $O(1)$ on average at both ends.
\index{stack}
A \texttt{stack}
A \key{stack}
is a data structure that provides two
$O(1)$ time operations:
adding an element to the top,
@ -578,7 +578,7 @@ cout << s.top(); // 2
\index{queue}
A \texttt{queue} also
A \key{queue} also
provides two $O(1)$ time operations:
adding an element to the end of the queue,
and removing the first element in the queue.
@ -601,7 +601,7 @@ cout << s.front(); // 2
\index{priority queue}
\index{heap}
A \texttt{priority\_queue}
A \key{priority queue}
maintains a set of elements.
The supported operations are insertion and,
depending on the type of the queue,