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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

# Print all permutations of a given string.

A permutation, also called an "arrangement number" or "order," is a rearrangement of the elements of an ordered list S into a one-to-one correspondence with S itself. A string of length n has n! permutation.
Source: Mathword(http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Permutation.html)

Below are the permutations of string ABC.
ABC, ACB, BAC, BCA, CAB, CBA

Here is a solution using backtracking.

NewPermutation

# include <stdio.h>
# include <conio.h>
 
/* Function to swap values at two pointers */
void swap (char *x, char *y)
{
    char temp;
    temp = *x;
    *x = *y;
    *y = temp;
}
 
/* Function to print permutations of string
   This function takes three parameters:
   1. String
   2. Starting index of the string
   3. Ending index of the string. */ 

void permute(char *a, int i, int n)
{
   int j;
   if (i == n)
     printf("%s\n", a);
   else
   {
        for (j = i; j <= n; j++)
       {
          swap((a+i), (a+j));
          permute(a, i+1, n);
          swap((a+i), (a+j)); //backtrack
       }
   }
}
 
/* Driver program to test above functions */
int main()
{
   char a[] = "ABC";
   permute(a, 0, 2);
   getchar();
   return 0;
}



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