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Home/ Questions/Q 8878297
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 14, 20262026-06-14T19:40:47+00:00 2026-06-14T19:40:47+00:00

In the following code for a binary search tree: template <class TKey> class bst<TKey>::node

  • 0

In the following code for a binary search tree:

template <class TKey>
class bst<TKey>::node *bst<TKey>::insert(node *T, TKey &key)
{
  if (T == NULL) {
    T = new node;
    T->key = key;
  } else if (T->key == key) {
    cout << "key " << key << " already in tree" << endl;
  } else {
    
    int dir = T->key < key;
    T->link[dir] = insert(T->link[dir], key);   
  }
  return T;
}

I’m confused what the line

int dir = T->key < key;

is doing. I could understand int dir = T->key, although of course that wouldn’t make sense, but I’ve not seen the < operator used in that way before. Any clues?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-14T19:40:48+00:00Added an answer on June 14, 2026 at 7:40 pm

    T->key < key is a condition. It will evaluate to either true or false.
    If it evaluates to true, dir will get value 1, otherwise it will get value 0.

    int dir = T->key < key;
    

    is short form for writing

    int dir;
    if(T->key < key)
        dir = 1;
    else
        dir = 0;
    

    When a boolean is assigned to an int, it gets the value 0 or 1 corresponding to false or true.

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