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Week 12 - Monday
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What did we talk about last time? Trees Graphing functions
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Two vegetarians and two cannibals are on one bank of a river They have a boat that can hold at most two people Come up with a sequence of boat loads that will convey all four people safely to the other side of the river The cannibals on any given bank cannot outnumber the vegetarians…. or else!
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Which we somehow seemed to skip earlier…
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Consider the following graph that shows all the routes an airline has between cities Minneapolis Milwaukee Chicago St. Louis Detroit Cincinnati Louisville Nashville
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What if we want to remove routes (to save money)? How can we keep all cities connected? Minneapolis Milwaukee Chicago St. Louis Detroit Cincinnati Louisville Nashville
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Does this tree have the smallest number of routes? Why? Minneapolis Milwaukee Chicago St. Louis Detroit Cincinnati Louisville Nashville
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A spanning tree for a graph G is a subgraph of G that contains every vertex of G and is a tree Some properties: Every connected graph has a spanning tree ▪ Why? Any two spanning trees for a graph have the same number of edges ▪ Why?
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In computer science, we often talk about weighted graphs when tackling practical applications A weighted graph is a graph for which each edge has a real number weight The sum of the weights of all the edges is the total weight of the graph Notation: If e is an edge in graph G, then w(e) is the weight of e and w(G) is the total weight of G A minimum spanning tree (MST) is a spanning tree of lowest possible total weight
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Here is the graph from before, with labeled weights Minneapolis Milwaukee Chicago St. Louis Detroit Cincinnati Louisville Nashville 355 695 262 74 348 269 242 151 230 306 83
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Kruskal's algorithm gives an easy to follow technique for finding an MST on a weighted, connected graph Informally, go through the edges, adding the smallest one, unless it forms a circuit Algorithm: Input: Graph G with n vertices Create a subgraph T with all the vertices of G (but no edges) Let E be the set of all edges in G Set m = 0 While m < n – 1 ▪ Find an edge e in E of least weight ▪ Delete e from E ▪ If adding e to T doesn't make a circuit ▪ Add e to T ▪ Set m = m + 1 Output: T
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Run Kruskal's algorithm on the city graph: Minneapolis Milwaukee Chicago St. Louis Detroit Cincinnati Louisville Nashville 355 695 262 74 348 269 242 151 230 306 83
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Output: Minneapolis Milwaukee Chicago St. Louis Detroit Cincinnati Louisville Nashville 355 262 74 242 151 230 83
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Prim's algorithm gives another way to find an MST Informally, start at a vertex and add the next closest node not already in the MST Algorithm: Input: Graph G with n vertices Let subgraph T contain a single vertex v from G Let V be the set of all vertices in G except for v For i from 1 to n – 1 ▪ Find an edge e in G such that: ▪ e connects T to one of the vertices in V ▪ e has the lowest weight of all such edges ▪ Let w be the endpoint of e in V ▪ Add e and w to T ▪ Delete w from V Output: T
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Apply Kruskal's algorithm to the graph below Now, apply Prim's algorithm to the graph below Is there any other MST we could make? 2 3 3 411 1
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Recall the definition of the floor of x: x = the largest integer that is less than or equal to x Graph f(x) = x Defining functions on integers instead of real values affects their graphs a great deal Graph p 1 (x) = x, x R Graph f(n) = n, n N
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There is a strong visual (and of course mathematical) correlation a function that is the multiple of another function Examples: g(x) = x + 2 2g(x) = 2x + 4 Given f graphed below, sketch 2f -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 1 2 3 4 5 6 2121 -2
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Consider the absolute value function f(x) = |x| Left of the origin it is constantly decreasing Right of the origin it is constantly increasing -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -11 2 3 4 5 6 2121 -2
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We say that f is decreasing on the set S iff for all real numbers x 1 and x 2 in S, if x 1 f(x 2 ) We say that f is increasing on the set S iff for all real numbers x 1 and x 2 in S, if x 1 < x 2, then f(x 1 ) < f(x 2 ) We say that f is an increasing (or decreasing) function iff f is increasing (or decreasing) on its entire domain Clearly, a positive multiple of an increasing function is increasing Virtually all running time functions are increasing functions
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Student Lecture
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Mathematicians worry about the growth of various functions They usually express such things in terms of limits, maybe with derivatives We are focused primarily on functions that bound running time spent and memory consumed We just need a rough guide We want to know the order of the growth
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Let f and g be real-valued functions defined on the same set of nonnegative real numbers f is of order at least g, written f(x) is (g(x)), iff there is a positive A R and a nonnegative a R such that A|g(x)| ≤ |f(x)| for all x > a f is of order at most g, written f(x) is O(g(x)), iff there is a positive B R and a nonnegative b R such that |f(x)| ≤ B|g(x)| for all x > b f is of order g, written f(x) is (g(x)), iff there are positive A, B R and a nonnegative k R such that A|g(x)| ≤ |f(x)| ≤ B|g(x)| for all x > k
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Express the following statements using appropriate notation: 10|x 6 | ≤ |17x 6 – 45x 3 + 2x + 8| ≤ 30|x 6 |, for x > 2 Justify the following: is ( x)
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Let f and g be real-valued functions defined on the same set of nonnegative real numbers 1. f(x) is (g(x)) and f(x) is O(g(x)) iff f(x) is (g(x)) 2. f(x) is (g(x)) iff g(x) is O(f(x)) 3. f(x) is (f(x)), f(x) is O(f(x)), and f(x) is (f(x)) 4. If f(x) is O(g(x)) and g(x) is O(h(x)) then f(x) is O(h(x)) 5. If f(x) is O(g(x)) and c is a positive real, then c f(x) is O(g(x)) 6. If f(x) is O(h(x)) and g(x) is O(k(x)) then f(x) + g(x) is O(G(x)) where G(x) = max(|h(x)|,|k(x)|) for all x 7. If f(x) is O(h(x)) and g(x) is O(k(x)) then f(x)g(x) is O(h(x)k(x))
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If 1 < x, then x < x 2 x 2 < x 3 …… So, for r, s R, where r 1, x r < x s By extension, x r is O(x s )
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Prove a bound for g(x) = (1/4)(x – 1)(x + 1) for x R Prove that x 2 is not O(x) Hint: Proof by contradiction
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Let f(x) be a polynomial with degree n f(x) = a n x n + a n-1 x n-1 + a n-2 x n-2 … + a 1 x + a 0 By extension from the previous results, if a n is a positive real, then f(x) is O(x s ) for all integers s n f(x) is (x r ) for all integers r ≤ n f(x) is (x n ) Furthermore, let g(x) be a polynomial with degree m g(x) = b m x m + b m-1 x m-1 + b m-2 x m-2 … + b 1 x + b 0 If a n and b m are positive reals, then f(x)/g(x) is O(x c ) for real numbers c > n - m f(x)/g(x) is not O(x c ) for all integers c > n - m f(x)/g(x) is (x n - m )
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We can easily extend our -, O-, and - notations to analyzing the running time of algorithms Imagine that an algorithm A is composed of some number of elementary operations (usually arithmetic, storing variables, etc.) We can imagine that the running time is tied purely to the number of operations This is, of course, a lie Not all operations take the same amount of time Even the same operation takes different amounts of time depending on caching, disk access, etc.
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First, assume that the number of operations performed by A on input size n is dependent only on n, not the values of the data If f(n) is (g(n)), we say that A is (g(n)) or that A is of order g(n) If the number of operations depends not only on n but also on the values of the data Let b(n) be the minimum number of operations where b(n) is (g(n)), then we say that in the best case, A is (g(n)) or that A has a best case order of g(n) Let w(n) be the maximum number of operations where w(n) is (g(n)), then we say that in the worst case, A is (g(n)) or that A has a worst case order of g(n)
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Approximate Time for f(n) Operations Assuming One Operation Per Nanosecond f(n)f(n)n = 10n = 1,000n = 100,000n = 10,000,000 log 2 n3.3 x 10 -9 s10 -8 s1.7 x 10 -8 s2.3 x 10 -8 s n10 -8 s10 -6 s0.0001 s0.01 s n log 2 n3.3 x 10 -8 s10 -5 s0.0017 s0.23 s n2n2 10 -7 s0.001 s10 s27.8 hours n3n3 10 -6 s1 s11.6 days31,668 years 2n2n 10 -6 s3.4 x 10 284 years3.1 x 10 30086 years2.9 x 10 3010283 years
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With a single for (or other) loop, we simply count the number of operations that must be performed: int p = 0; int x = 2; for( int i = 2; i <= n; i++ ) p = (p + i)*x; Counting multiplies and adds, (n – 1) iterations times 2 operations = 2n – 2 As a polynomial, 2n – 2 is (n)
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When loops do not depend on each other, we can simply multiply their iterations (and asymptotic bounds) int p = 0; for( int i = 2; i <= n; i++ ) for( int j = 3; j <= n; j++ ) p++; Clearly (n – 1)(n -2) is (n 2 )
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When loops depend on each other, we have to do more analysis int s = 0; for( int i = 1; i <= n; i++ ) for( int j = 1; j <= i; j++ ) s = s + j*(i – j + 1); What's the running time here? Arithmetic sequence saves the day (for the millionth time)
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When loops depend on floor, what happens to the running time? int a = 0; for( int i = n/2; i <= n; i++ ) a = n - i; Floor is used implicitly here, because we are using integer division What's the running time? Hint: Consider n as odd or as even separately
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Consider a basic sequential search algorithm: int search( int[] array, int n, int value) { for( int i = 0; i < n; i++ ) if( array[i] == value ) return i; return -1; } What's its best case running time? What's its worst case running time? What's its average case running time?
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Insertion sort is a common introductory sort It is suboptimal, but it is one of the fastest ways to sort a small list (10 elements or fewer) The idea is to sort initial segments of an array, insert new elements in the right place as they are found So, for each new item, keep moving it up until the element above it is too small (or we hit the top)
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public static void sort( int[] array, int n) { for( int i = 1; i < n; i++ ) { int next = array[i]; int j = i - 1; while( j != 0 && array[j] > next ) { array[j+1] = array[j]; j--; } array[j] = next; } }
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What is the best case analysis of insertion sort? Hint: Imagine the array is already sorted
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What is the worst case analysis of insertion sort? Hint: Imagine the array is sorted in reverse order
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What is the average case analysis of insertion sort? Much harder than the previous two! Let's look at it recursively Let E k be the average number of comparisons needed to sort k elements E k can be computed as the sum of the average number of comparisons needed to sort k – 1 elements plus the average number of comparisons (x) needed to insert the k th element in the right place E k = E k-1 + x
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We can employ the idea of expected value from probability There are k possible locations for the element to go We assume that any of these k locations is equally likely For each turn of the loop, there are 2 comparisons to do There could be 1, 2, 3, … up to k turns of the loop Thus, weighting each possible number of iterations evenly gives us
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Having found x, our recurrence relation is: E k = E k-1 + k + 1 Sorting one element takes no time, so E 1 = 0 Solve this recurrence relation! Well, if you really banged away at it, you might find: E n = (1/2)(n 2 + 3n – 4) By the polynomial rules, this is (n 2 ) and so the average case running time is the same as the worst case
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Finish algorithmic efficiency Exponential and logarithmic functions
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Keep reading Chapter 11 Keep working on Assignment 9 Due Friday before midnight Exam 3 is next Monday Review on Friday
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