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CSC 282 – Algorithms Daniel Stefankovic – CSB 620 stefanko@cs.rochester.edu TA: Girts Folkmanis – CSB 614 gfolkman@cs.rochester.edu www.cs.rochester.edu/~stefanko/Teaching/06CS282
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Grading formula 25% - homework 30% - quizzes 25% - midterm (Tu, Oct. 24) 30% - final (Th, Dec. 21)
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25% - homework turn in before class on the due date no late homework accepted two lowest homework scores dropped 30% - quizzes 1 each week 10 min closed book no make-up quizzes two lowest quiz grades dropped
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What is an algorithm? algorithm = problem-solving procedure Algoritmi de numero Indorum (Al-Khwarizmi Concerning the Hindu Art of Reckoning) CORRECTNESS EFFICIENCY
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Problem: is n a prime? P RIMALITY : INSTANCE: a natural number n QUESTION: is n a prime? Is 12345678987654321 a prime?
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Problem: is n a prime? Is 12345678987654321 a prime? Algorithm 1: 1 for k from 2 to n-1 do 2 if k divides n then RETURN “composite” 3 RETURN “prime”
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Problem: is n a prime? Algorithm 1: 1 for k from 2 to n-1 do 2 if k divides n then RETURN “composite” 3 RETURN “prime” Algorithm 2: 1 for k from 2 to √ n do 2 if k divides n then RETURN “composite” 3 RETURN “prime”
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Problem: is n a prime? CORRECT? Algorithm 2: 1 for k from 2 to √ n do 2 if k divides n then RETURN “composite” 3 RETURN “prime”
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Problem: is n a prime? RSA cryptosystem needs primes with 1024-4096 bits. Running time of our algorithms: Algorithm 1: 2 1024 – 2 4096 Algorithm 2:
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Problem: is n a prime? RSA cryptosystem needs primes with 1024-4096 bits. Running time of our algorithms: Algorithm 1: 2 1024 – 2 4096 Algorithm 2: 2 512 – 2 2048 NOT EFFICIENT
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What means efficient? running time is bounded by a polynomial in the input size “efficient program using other efficient as subroutines is efficient”
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Input size How many bits needed to represent n?
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Input size How many bits needed to represent n? √n polynomial(log n) ??? Algorithm 2: 1 for k from 2 to √ n do 2 if k divides n then RETURN “composite” 3 RETURN “prime” log n
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What means efficient? running time is bounded by a polynomial in the input size More refined classification asymptotic notation
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Asymptotic notation DEF: Let f,g: N R +. We say f(n) = O(g(n)) if ( C) ( n) f(n) C. g(n)
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Asymptotic notation DEF: Let f,g: N R +. We say f(n) = O(g(n)) if ( C) ( n) f(n) C. g(n) 1 n 2 + n 3 = O(n 4 ) 2 n 2 / log(n) = O(n. log n) 3 5n + log(n) = O(n) 4 n log n = O(n 100 ) 5 3 n = O(2 n. n 100 )
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Asymptotic notation 1 n 2 + n 3 = O(n 4 ) 2 n 2 / log(n) O(n. log n) 3 5n + log(n) = O(n) 4 n log n O(n 100 ) 5 3 n O(2 n. n 100 )
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Asymptotic notation 1 n! = O(3 n ) 2 n +1 = O(n) 3 2 n+1 = O(2 n ) 4 (n+1)! = O(n!) 5 1+c+c 2 +…+c n = O(c n ) 6 1+c+c 2 +…+c n = O(1) n!= n.(n-1).(n-2) … 3.2.1
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Asymptotic notation 1 n! O(3 n ) 2 n+1 = O(n) 3 2 n+1 = O(2 n ) 4 (n+1)! O(n!) 5 1+c+c 2 +…+c n = O(c n ) for c>1 6 1+c+c 2 +…+c n = O(1) for c<1
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Asymptotic notation DEF: Let f,g: N R +. We say f(n) = (g(n)) if f(n)=O(g(n)) and g(n)=O(f(n))
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What means efficient? polynomial-time = running time is bounded by a polynomial in the input size, i.e., ( k) T(n) = O(n k ) More refined analysis = asymptotics for the running time (as a function of input-size) ideally we would like f(n) such that T(n) = (f(n))
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An applied problem INSTANCE: n points in the plane SOLUTION: a tour connecting the points MEASURE: the length of the tour
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An applied problem INSTANCE: n points in the plane SOLUTION: a tour connecting the points MEASURE: the length of the tour
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An applied problem INSTANCE: n points in the plane SOLUTION: a tour connecting the points MEASURE: the length of the tour
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An efficient algorithm?
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A correct algorithm best (1 2 3 … n) for each permutation if cost( )<cost(best) then best EFFICIENCY?
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Sorting S ORTING : INSTANCE: a sequence of n numbers a 1,a 2, …, a n SOLUTION: reordering b i of the input such that b 1 b 2 … b n
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Insertion sort i 1 while i n do j i while j 2 and a[ j-1] > a[ j ] do swap a[ j ],a[ j-1] j j - 1 i i + 1
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Insertion sort – correctness? i 1 while i n do j i while j 2 and a[ j-1] > a[ j ] do swap a[ j ],a[ j-1] j j - 1 i i + 1
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Insertion sort – running time?
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The worst-case running time of insertion sort is (n 2 ).
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Merge 2 sorted lists M ERGE INSTANCE: 2 lists x i, y i such that x 1 x 2 … x n y 1 y 2 … y m SOLUTION: ordered merge
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1 i 1, j 1 2 while i n and j n do 3 if x i y j then 4 output x i, i i + 1 5 else 6 output y j, j j + 1 7 output remaining elements Merge 2 sorted lists
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M ERGE -S ORT (a,l,r) if l < r then m (l+r)/2 M ERGE -S ORT (a,I,m) M ERGE -S ORT (a,m+1,r) M ERGE (a,l,m,r) Mergesort
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Running time? Mergesort
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Running time? Mergesort [ … n/2 … ] [... n … ] [ … n/4 … ] Depth ?
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Running time? Mergesort [ … n/2 … ] [... n … ] [ … n/4 … ] Depth = log n
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Time spent on merge? Mergesort [ … n/2 … ] [... n … ] [ … n/4 … ] Depth = log n
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Time spent on merge? Mergesort [ … n/2 … ] [... n … ] [ … n/4 … ] Depth = log n O(n) O(n.logn)
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recurrence T(n)= T(n/2) + (n) if n>1 T(1)= (1) Mergesort
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RAM model Program r0r0 r1r1 r2r2 r3r3 r4r4 r5r5 memory... Each register holds an integer Operations: simple arithmetic if-then, goto, etc.
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