The physical copy was a myth. The university library had two: one was eaten by a golden retriever in 1993, the other was "on permanent loan" to a graduate student who had since vanished into a quant firm in Chicago. The bookstore’s price for a new copy was $180—roughly the cost of Leo’s weekly ramen budget for an entire semester.
The midterm came. The professor handed out the exam. Leo finished in forty minutes. He solved the dynamic programming problem about optimal matrix multiplication by drawing a tiny, mental memoization table in the air with his finger. He found the bug in the provided pseudocode for a binomial heap merge in under thirty seconds. The physical copy was a myth
“Meet me in my office at 2 AM. Bring a laptop, a caffeine source of your choice, and an open mind. And Maya—start reviewing binary search on two sorted arrays. You’ll know why when the time comes.” The midterm came
“Data Structures and Algorithms by Alfred V. Aho and Jeffrey D. Ullman PDF.” He solved the dynamic programming problem about optimal
"Data Structures and Algorithms by Alfred V. Aho and Jeffrey D. Ullman PDF."