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Project #3 (STREET MAPPING)
Data Structures and Algorithms
Introduction
This project will require you to create a rudimentary mapping program in Java. Given a data set representing the
roads and intersections in a specific geographic region, your program should be able to plot a map of the data and
provide shortest path directions between any two arbitrary intersections using Dijkstra’s algorithm.
Input Data
The geographical data necessary to run your application is provided in the format of a tab-delimited text files. Each
line will consist of 4 pieces of data, as defined below:
Intersections start with “i”, followed by a unique string ID, and decimal representations of latitude and longitude.
i IntersectionID Latitude Longitude
Roads start with “r”, followed by a unique string ID, and the IDs of the two intersections it connects.
r RoadID Intersection1ID Intersection2ID
You may safely assume that all input files will declare intersections before their IDs are used in roads. Three
different data sets are provided for your testing purposes with this project. The first data set, ur.txt represents a
subset of the pedestrian sidewalks on our campus. Building entrances have meaningful intersection IDs such as
“CSB” or “SUEB” for your convenience. The second and third data set test your program’s ability to scale
well, with the latest census data on roads in Monroe County and NYS.
Page 1 / 3Deliverable
Your program will be evaluated on how well it accomplishes the following two tasks and command line specification:
Basic Mapping
Implement your own Graph, Node and Edge classes. For this you may use code available online or other
sources, but you must cite the source.
Construct a Graph object using the information read in from the specified input file
Draw the map using Java Graphics (no third party graphing libraries allowed). The map should scale with
the size of the window.
Directions Between Intersections
Implement Dijkstra’s algorithm to find the shortest path between any two arbitrary intersections, as provided
by the command line arguments.
When the shortest path has been discovered, the intersections followed to reach the destination should be
printed out to the console in order. Additionally, your program should print out the total distance traveled in
miles.
Finally, if the program is displaying the map, it should highlight (in a different color, stroke width, etc.) the
solution path found.
Command Line Arguments
Your program should accept the following set of command line arguments:
java StreetMap map . txt [ -- show ] [-- directions startIntersection
endIntersection ]
Your program should only display a map if --show is present. Below, you can find how a few of the sample runs
may look like:
java StreetMap ur . txt --show -- directions HOYT MOREY // Showing both map
and the directions
java StreetMap ur . txt --show // Just showing the map
java StreetMap ur . txt -- directions HOYT MOREY // Showing the map is
optional .
Getting Started
It is highly recommended that you get your program to work with the UR campus map before moving
onto Monroe County or NYS map data. The size and complexity of those maps introduce new issues that
are best handled after you’ve mastered the basic project requirements.
Hand In
Each student must submit individually irrespective of whether s/he is working in a team or not.
Hand in the source code from this project at the appropriate location on the Blackboard system. You should hand in a
single compressed/archived (i.e. “zipped”) file named proj3.zip which contains the following
Page 2 / 31. A plain text file named README that includes your (and your team member’s) contact information, a detailed
synopsis of how your code works and any notable obstacles you overcame, and a list of all files included in
the submission. If you worked in a team, you must state how you have distributed the workload.
If you went above and beyond in your implementation and feel that you deserve extra credit for a feature in
your program, be sure to explicitly state what that feature is and why it deserves extra credit.
The README for this project should clearly explain any design or implementation choices you made, the
expected runtime of plotting the map and finding the shortest path between two intersections.
2. Source code files representing the work accomplished in this project. All source code files should contain
author identification in the comments at the top of the file.
Grading Rubric
30% Basic mapping
15% Implementation
15% Correctness
50% Directions between intersections
25% Implementation
25% Correctness
20% README with team-information, detailed description of how you structured your project, approached the
challenges the larger maps presented, and the runtime analysis of your code.
Detailed description of your project should include: A brief summary of how your program works, classes used,
their private and public members and methods. You should state the input and output parameters of each method.
See ‘Hand In’ section for further details.
Extra Credit is available for projects that have interactive and/or exceptionally beautiful maps. This time, the
Lab TAs will decide if you deserve any extra-credit.
Page 3 / 3
For calculating the distance between two intersections, you must use This uses the ‘haversine’ formula.
Checkhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haversine_formula . It’s ok to use implementation of this
method found online as it is as long as you cite the source.
There might be two intersections which are not connected.
‘show’ and ‘direction’ may appear in any order.
For a large map, we advice you not to add all intersections to the priority queue at the beginning.
If you use a java.util.PriorityQueue, for changing priority of any entry, you must remove it and add it
again. You are welcome to write your own heap implementation (if you want) to avoid removing the
entry.

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