1 / 28

Divide-and-Conquer Approach

Divide-and conquer is a general algorithm design approach: Divide : divide the input data S in two disjoint subsets S 1 and S 2 Recur : solve the sub-problems associated with S 1 and S 2 Conquer : combine the solutions for S 1 and S 2 into a solution for S

Download Presentation

Divide-and-Conquer Approach

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Divide-and conquer is a general algorithm design approach: Divide: divide the input data S in two disjoint subsets S1and S2 Recur: solve the sub-problems associated with S1and S2 Conquer: combine the solutions for S1and S2 into a solution for S The base case for the recursion are sub-problems of size 0 or 1 Divide-and-Conquer Approach

  2. Merge Sort

  3. Merge Sort as a Divide and Conquer Approach • Merging a two lists of one element each is the same as sorting them. • Merge sort divides up an unsorted list until the above condition is met and then sorts the divided parts back together in pairs. • Specifically this can be done by recursively dividing the unsorted list in half, merge sorting the right side then the left side and then merging the right and left back together.

  4. Merge-sort on an input List (Array) S with n elements consists of three steps: Divide: partition S into two lists S1and S2 of about n/2 elements each Recur: recursively sort S1and S2 Conquer: merge S1and S2 into a unique sorted list. Merge-Sort AlgorithmmergeSort(S, C) InputList S with n elements, comparator C Output List S sorted • according to C ifS.size() > 1 (S1, S2)  partition(S, n/2) mergeSort(S1, C) mergeSort(S2, C) S  merge(S1, S2)

  5. Merging Two Sorted Sequences Algorithmmerge(A, B) Inputsequences A and B withn/2 elements each Outputsorted sequence of A  B Sempty sequence whileA.isEmpty()B.isEmpty() ifA.first().element()<B.first().element() S.insertLast(A.remove(A.first())) else S.insertLast(B.remove(B.first())) whileA.isEmpty()S.insertLast(A.remove(A.first())) whileB.isEmpty()S.insertLast(B.remove(B.first())) return S • The conquer step of merge-sort consists of merging two sorted sequences A and B into a sorted sequence S containing the union of the elements of A and B • Example: L1 = { 3 8 9 } L2 = { 1 5 7 } merge(L1, L2) = { 1 3 5 7 8 9 }

  6. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  7. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  8. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  9. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  10. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  11. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  12. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  13. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  14. Merging (cont.) X: Y: Result:

  15. Merge Sort Example

  16. Merge Sort Example

  17. Merge Sort Example

  18. Merge Sort Example

  19. Merge Sort Example

  20. Merge Sort Example Merge

  21. Merge Sort Example Merge

  22. Merge Sort Example Merge

  23. Merge Sort Example Merge

  24. Merge Sort Example

  25. Merge Sort Analysis

  26. AlgorithmMERGESORT Input: An array A[1..n] of n elements. Output:A[1..n] sorted in nondecreasing order. mergesort(A, 1, n) Procedure mergesort(A, low, high) 1. if low < high then 2. mid (low + high) / 2 T(1) 3. mergesort(A, low, mid) T(n/2) 4. mergesort(A, mid + 1, high) T(n/2) 5. MERGE (A, low, mid, high) T(n) 6. end if Use: Linear-time merge subroutine.

  27. Analysis for Merge Sort

  28. Merge Sort Analysis T(N) = 2T(N/2) + N = O(N logN)

More Related