1 / 48

Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures . Chapter 19 Unordered Collections: Sets and Dictionaries. Objectives. After completing this chapter, you will be able to: Implement a set type and a dictionary type using lists

naida
Download Presentation

Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

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. Fundamentals of Python:From First Programs Through Data Structures Chapter 19 Unordered Collections: Sets and Dictionaries

  2. Objectives After completing this chapter, you will be able to: • Implement a set type and a dictionary type using lists • Explain how hashing can help a programmer achieve constant access time to unordered collections • Explain strategies for resolving collisions during hashing, such as linear probing, quadratic probing, and bucket/chaining Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  3. Objectives (continued) After completing this chapter, you will be able to: (continued) • Use a hashing strategy to implement a set type and a dictionary type • Use a binary search tree to implement a sorted set type and a sorted dictionary type Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  4. Using Sets • A set is a collection of items in no particular order • Most typical operations: • Return the number of items in the set • Test for the empty set (a set that contains no items) • Add an item to the set • Remove an item from the set • Test for set membership • Obtain the union of two sets • Obtain the intersection of two sets • Obtain the difference of two sets Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  5. Using Sets (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  6. The Python set Class Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  7. The Python set Class (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  8. A Sample Session with Sets Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  9. A Sample Session with Sets (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  10. Applications of Sets • Sets have many applications in the area of data processing • Example: In database management, answer to query that contains conjunction of two keys could be constructed from intersection of sets of items associated with those keys Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  11. Implementations of Sets • Arrays and lists may be used to contain the data items of a set • A linked list has the advantage of supporting constant-time removals of items • Once they are located in the structure • Hashing attempts to approximate random access into an array for insertions, removals, and searches Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  12. Relationship Between Sets and Dictionaries • A dictionary is an unordered collection of elements called entries • Each entry consists of a key and an associated value • A dictionary’s keys must be unique, but its values may be duplicated • One can think of a dictionary as having a set of keys Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  13. List Implementations of Sets and Dictionaries • The simplest implementations of sets and dictionaries use lists • This section presents these implementations and assesses their run-time performance Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  14. Sets • List implementation of a set Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  15. Dictionaries • Our list-based implementation of a dictionary is called ListDict • The entries in a dictionary consist of two parts, a key and a value • A list implementation of a dictionary behaves in many ways like a list implementation of a set Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  16. Dictionaries (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  17. Dictionaries (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  18. Dictionaries (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  19. Complexity Analysis of the List Implementations of Sets and Dictionaries • The list implementations of sets and dictionaries require little programmer effort • Unfortunately, they do not perform well • Basic accessing methods must perform a linear search of the underlying list • Each basic accessing method is O(n) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  20. Hashing Strategies • Key-to-address transformation or a hashing function • Acts on a given key by returning its relative position in an array • Hash table • An array used with a hashing strategy • Collision • Placement of different keys at the same array index Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  21. Hashing Strategies (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  22. Hashing Strategies (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  23. The Relationship of Collisions to Density • Density • The number of keys relative to the length of an array • As the density decreases, so does the probability of collisions • Keeping a low load factor even (say, below .2) seems like a good way to avoid collisions • Cost of memory incurred by load factors below .5 is probably prohibitive for data sets of millions of items • Even load factors below .5 cannot prevent many collisions from occurring for some data sets Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  24. Hashing with Non-Numeric Keys • Try returning the sum of the ASCII values in the string • This method has effect of producing same keys for anagrams • Strings that contain same characters, but in different order • First letters of many words in English are unevenly distributed • This might have the effect of weighting or biasing the sums generated Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  25. Hashing with Non-Numeric Keys (continued) • One solution: • If length of string is greater than a certain threshold • Drop first character from string before computing sum • Can also subtract the ASCII value of the last character • Python also includes a standard hash function for use in hashing applications • Function can receive any Python object as an argument and returns a unique integer Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  26. Hashing with Non-Numeric Keys (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  27. Linear Probing • Linear probing • Simplest way to resolve a collision • Search array, starting from collision spot, for the first available position • At the start of an insertion, the hashing function is run to compute the home index of the item • If cell at home index is not available, move index to the right to probe for an available cell • When search reaches last position of array, probing wraps around to continue from the first position Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  28. For retrievals, stop probing process when current array cell is empty or it contains the target item If target item is found, its cell is set to DELETED Linear Probing (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  29. Linear Probing (continued) • Problem: After several insertions/removals, item is farther away from its home index than needs to be • Increasing the average overall access time • Two ways to deal with this problem: • After a removal, shift items on the cell’s right over to the cell’s left until an empty cell, a currently occupied cell, or the home indexes for each item are reached • Regularly rehash the table (e.g., if load factor is .5) • Clustering: Occurs when items causing a collision are relocated to the same region within the array Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  30. Linear Probing (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures

  31. Quadratic Probing • To avoid clustering associated with linear probing, we can advance the search for an empty position a considerable distance from the collision point • Quadratic probing: Increments the home index by the square of a distance on each attempt • Problem: By jumping over some cells, one or more of them might be missed • Can lead to some wasted space Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 31

  32. Quadratic Probing (continued) • Here is the code for insertions, updated to use quadratic probing: Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 32

  33. Chaining • Items are stored in an array of linked lists (chains) • Each item’s key locates the bucket (index) of the chain in which the item resides or is to be inserted • Retrieval and removal each perform these steps: • Compute the item’s home index in the array • Search the linked list at that index for the item • To insert an item: • Compute the item’s home index in the array • If cell is empty, create a node with item and assign the node to cell; else (collision), insert item in chain Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 33

  34. Chaining (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 34

  35. Complexity Analysis • Linear probing: Complexity depends on load factor (D) and tendency of items to cluster • Worst case (method traverses entire array before locating item’s position): behavior is linear • Average behavior in searching for an item that cannot be found is (1/2) [1 + 1/(1 – D)2] • Quadratic probing: Tends to mitigate clustering • Average search complexity is 1 – loge(1 – D) – (D / 2) for the successful case and 1 / (1 – D) – D – loge(1 – D) for the unsuccessful case Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 35

  36. Complexity Analysis (continued) • Chaining: • Locating an item consists of two parts: • Computing home index  constant time behavior • Searching linked list upon a collision  linear • Worst case (all items that have collided with each other are in one chain, which is a linked list): O(n) • If lists are evenly distributed in array and array is fairly large, the second part can be close to constant • Best case (a chain of length 1 occupies each array cell): O(1) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 36

  37. Case Study: Profiling Hashing Strategies • Request: • Write a program that allows a programmer to profile different hashing strategies • Analysis: • Should allow to gather statistics on number of collisions caused by the hashing strategies • Other useful information: • Hash table’s load factor • Number of probes needed to resolve collisions during linear or quadratic probing Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 37

  38. Case Study: Profiling Hashing Strategies (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 38

  39. Case Study: Profiling Hashing Strategies (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 39

  40. Case Study: Profiling Hashing Strategies (continued) • Analysis (continued): • Here are the profiler’s results: • Design: • Profilerclass requires instance variables to track a table, number of collisions, and number of probes Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 40

  41. Case Study: Profiling Hashing Strategies (continued) • Implementation: Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 41

  42. Case Study: Profiling Hashing Strategies (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 42

  43. Hashing Implementation of Dictionaries • HashDict uses the bucket/chaining strategy • To manage the array, declare three instance variables: _table, _size, and _capacity Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 43

  44. Hashing Implementation of Sets • The design of the methods for HashSetis also the same as the methods in HashDict, except: • __contains__searches for an item (not key) • addinserts item only if it is not already in the set • A single iterator method is included instead of separate methods that return keys and values Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 44

  45. Sorted Sets and Dictionaries • Each item added to a sorted set must be comparable with its other items • Same applies for keys added to a sorted dictionary • The iterator for each type of collection guarantees its users access to items or keys in sorted order • Implementation alternatives: • List-based: must maintain a sorted list of the items • Hashing implementation: not feasible • Binary search tree implementation: generally provide logarithmic access to data items Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 45

  46. Sorted Sets and Dictionaries (continued) Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 46

  47. Summary • A set is an unordered collection of items • Each item is unique • List-based implementation  linear-time access • Hashing implementation  constant-time access • Items in a sorted set can be visited in sorted order • A tree-based implementation of a sorted set supports logarithmic-time access • A dictionary is an unordered collection of entries, where each entry consists of a key and a value • Each key is unique; its values may be duplicated Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 47

  48. Summary (continued) • A sorted dictionary imposes an ordering by comparison on its keys • Implementations of both types of dictionaries are similar to those of sets • Hashing: Technique for locating an item in constant time • Techniques to resolve collisions: linear collision processing, quadratic collision processing, chaining • The run-time and memory aspects involve the load factor of the array Fundamentals of Python: From First Programs Through Data Structures 48

More Related