From ccf28a5ef026032cc878b9fd199b22c9b1787b6e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: lshprung Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 10:10:00 -0700 Subject: Post-class 05/15 --- 05-13.md | 4 +++ 05-15.md | 99 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 05-15_img1.png | Bin 0 -> 50517 bytes 3 files changed, 103 insertions(+) create mode 100644 05-15.md create mode 100644 05-15_img1.png diff --git a/05-13.md b/05-13.md index 13e8970..8b53a35 100644 --- a/05-13.md +++ b/05-13.md @@ -212,3 +212,7 @@ NODE *deleteNODE(NODE *root, int x, bool *found){ |**Add** |O(n) |O(n) |O(n) |O(n) |O(n) |O(h) (log(n) <= h <= n)| |**Remove** |O(n) |O(n) |O(n) |O(n) |O(n) |O(h) (log(n) <= h <= n)| |**Min/Max** |O(n) |O(1) |O(m) |O(n) |O(1) (assuming fast access to tail)|O(h) (log(n) <= h <= n)| + +--- + +[05/15 ->](05-15.md) diff --git a/05-15.md b/05-15.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9a34c34 --- /dev/null +++ b/05-15.md @@ -0,0 +1,99 @@ +[\<- 05/13](05-13.md) + +--- + +# Priority Queue + +In a priority queue, an element with **high priority** is served before an element with low priority. If two elements have the same priority, they are served **according to their order** in the queue + +### Example + +- A priority queue example: Emergency room + - FIFO + - in case of emergency, a patient can be given priority + +## Priority Queue & Queue + +- In a queue, all the keys are ordered only according to when they enter the queue. Such order is not related to their priorities (e.g. values) + +- In a priority queue, both the **key priorities** (e.g. values) and **their order** of entering the queue are considered. In addition, priority plays a more important role + +## Implementation + +- Assume you are required to organize a sequence as 5,20,18,10,3,18,20 in a priority queue. What is the dequeue sequence? (i.e. lower value indicating higher priority) + - 3, 5, 10, 18, 18, 20, 20 + +- How to implement a priority queue? + - Can we use sorted array? What are the worst-case big-O for enqueue and dequeue? + - Enqueue will involve shifting -> O(n) + - Dequeue can function as a circular queue -> O(1) + - Can we use sorted linked list? What are the worst-case big-O for enqueue and dequeue? + - Enqueue involves traversal -> O(n) + - Dequeue is O(1) + - No benefits with linked list + - Can we do better? YES + - **Binary Heap** + +# Heap + +- A heap is a **binary tree** with two properties: + 1. It's a complete (or nearly complete) tree in that it is built left-to-right and top-down (the shape) + 2. It's heap ordered: the root of every subtree is the **maximum value** in that subtree (the order) + +- Technically these are called "max heaps" and we can also have "min heaps" + +## Insertion + +- The largest value in a binary max-heap is always the **root** +- Q: How do we insert a value into a max heap? +- A: We + - insert the new node so as to **not break the shape of the tree** + - We might **break the heap order**, so we then fix it + +- To not break the shape, we insert the new node as the **next leaf from left to right** on the lowest level +- This may break the heap order, so we **fix the heap** nodes by repeatedly swapping the new value with its new parent - We call this process as reheap up +- ex. insert 30, 70, 50, 10, 20, 80, 40 +- What is the big O? + - O(h) + +- Insertion is O(h), but h is always log(n), so insert is O(log(n)) + +## Deletion + +- Q: How do we delete a value from a heap? +- A: We must first find it, so **we generally always delete the maximum value** because it's at the root + - We first replace the root with the last value on the lowest level, so as to preserve the shape + - This process may break the heap order, so we fix it by repeatedly swapping the upstart value with its larger child. Why not smaller child? + - "reheap down" + +- What is big O? + - O(h) = O(log(n)) + +- Deletion (of the root) is also O(log(n)) + +## Implementation + +- We will implement our heap using an **array** +- Let's look at implementing a heap + +![heap example](05-15_img1.png) + +|Value |44|18|33|6|14|32|27|-|-| +|---------|--|--|--|-|--|--|--|-|-| +|**Index**|0|1|2|3|4|5|6|7|8| + +- Specifically, if the parent's node's index is i + - left child is of i is `2*i + 1` + - right child of i is `2*i + 2` + - parent of i is `(i-1)/2` + +- Example: Node 14 -> index = 4 + - parent should be index `(4-1)/2)` = 1 + +binary heaps work because of **no holes**, and are a great example of an implicit data structure that uses no extra space to let you know where everything is + +## When to use Heap? + +- Generally speaking, a heap can be used whenever you need **quick access** to the largest (or smallest) item, because that item will always be the first element in the array or at the root of the tree +- It's not good for searching, since the remainder of the array is kept partially unsorted +- Some examples of heap: priority queue, Huffman coding, heap sort, etc. diff --git a/05-15_img1.png b/05-15_img1.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b371935 Binary files /dev/null and b/05-15_img1.png differ -- cgit