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Chapter 13 Priority Queues. 2 Priority queue A stack is first in, last out A queue is first in, first out A priority queue is least-in-first-out The “smallest”

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 13 Priority Queues. 2 Priority queue A stack is first in, last out A queue is first in, first out A priority queue is least-in-first-out The “smallest”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 13 Priority Queues

2 2 Priority queue A stack is first in, last out A queue is first in, first out A priority queue is least-in-first-out The “smallest” element is the first one removed (You could also define a largest-in-first-out priority queue) The definition of “smallest” is up to the programmer (for example, you might define it by implementing Comparator or Comparable ) If there are several “smallest” elements, the implementer must decide which to remove first Remove any “smallest” element (don’t care which) Remove the first one added

3 3 A priority queue ADT Here is one possible ADT: PriorityQueue() : a constructor void add(Comparable o) : inserts o into the priority queue Comparable removeLeast() : removes and returns the least element Comparable getLeast() : returns (but does not remove) the least element boolean isEmpty() : returns true iff empty int size() : returns the number of elements void clear() : discards all elements

4 4 Evaluating implementations When we choose a data structure, it is important to look at usage patterns If we load an array once and do thousands of searches on it, we want to make searching fast—so we would probably sort the array If we load a huge array and expect to do only a few searches, we probably don’t want to spend time sorting the array For almost all uses of a queue (including a priority queue), we eventually remove everything that we add Hence, when we analyze a priority queue, neither “add” nor “remove” is more important—we need to look at the timing for “add + remove”

5 5 Array implementations A priority queue could be implemented as an unsorted array (with a count of elements) Adding an element would take O(1) time (why?) Removing an element would take O(n) time (why?) Hence, adding and removing an element takes O(n) time This is an inefficient representation A priority queue could be implemented as a sorted array (again, with a count of elements) Adding an element would take O(n) time (why?) Removing an element would take O(1) time (why?) Hence, adding and removing an element takes O(n) time Again, this is inefficient

6 6 Linked list implementations A priority queue could be implemented as an unsorted linked list Adding an element would take O(1) time (why?) Removing an element would take O(n) time (why?) A priority queue could be implemented as a sorted linked list Adding an element would take O(n) time (why?) Removing an element would take O(1) time (why?) As with array representations, adding and removing an element takes O(n) time Again, these are inefficient implementations

7 7 Binary tree implementations A priority queue could be represented as a (not necessarily balanced) binary search tree Insertion times would range from O(log n) to O(n) (why?) Removal times would range from O(log n) to O(n) (why?) A priority queue could be represented as a balanced binary search tree Insertion and removal could destroy the balance We need an algorithm to rebalance the binary tree Good rebalancing algorithms require only O(log n) time, but are complicated

8 8 Heap implementation A priority queue can be implemented as a heap In order to do this, we have to define the heap property In Heapsort, a node has the heap property if it is at least as large as its children (for a MAX heap) For a priority queue, we will define a node to have the heap property if it is as least as small as its children (since we are using smaller numbers to represent higher priorities) – i.e. a MIN heap 12 83 Heapsort: Blue node has the MAX heap property 3 812 Priority queue: Blue node has the MIN heap property

9 9 Array representation of a heap Left child of node i is 2*i + 1, right child is 2*i + 2 Unless the computation yields a value larger than lastIndex, in which case there is no such child Parent of node i is (i – 1)/2 Unless i == 0 12 1418 6 8 3 312618148 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 lastIndex = 5

10 10 Using the heap To add an element: Increase lastIndex and put the new value there Reheap the newly added node This is called up-heap bubbling or percolating up Up-heap bubbling requires O(log n) time To remove an element: Remove the element at location 0 Move the element at location lastIndex to location 0, and decrement lastIndex Reheap the new root node (the one now at location 0 ) This is called down-heap bubbling or percolating down Down-heap bubbling requires O(log n) time Thus, it requires O(log n) time to add and remove an element

11 11 Comments A priority queue is a data structure that is designed to return elements in order of priority Efficiency is usually measured as the sum of the time it takes to add and to remove an element Simple implementations take O(n) time Heap implementations take O(log n) time Balanced binary tree implementations take O(log n) time Binary tree implementations, without regard to balance, can take O(n) (linear) time Thus, for any sort of heavy-duty use, heap or balanced binary tree implementations are better

12 12 Java 5 java.util.PriorityQueue Java 5 finally has a PriorityQueue class, based on heaps PriorityQueue queue = new PriorityQueue (); boolean add(E o) boolean remove(Object o) boolean offer(E o) E peek() boolean poll() void clear() int size()

13 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 13 Heaps A heap is a binary tree with properties: 1.It is complete Each level of tree completely filled Except possibly bottom level (nodes in left most positions) 2.It satisfies heap-order property Data in each node >= data in children

14 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 14 Heaps Which of the following are MAX heaps? A B C

15 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 15 Implementing a Heap Use an array or vector Number the nodes from top to bottom –Number nodes on each row from left to right Store data in i th node in i th location of array (vector)

16 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 16 Implementing a Heap Note the placement of the nodes in the array (note the array cells start at 1 not 0, unlike our implementation)

17 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 17 Implementing a Heap (note array starts at 1 here) In an array implementation children of i th node are at myArray[2*i] and myArray[2*i+1] Parent of the i th node is at mayArray[i/2]

18 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 18 Basic Heap Operations Constructor –Set mySize to 0, allocate array Empty –Check value of mySize Retrieve max item –Return root of the binary tree, myArray[1]

19 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 19 Basic Heap Operations Delete max item –Max item is the root, replace with last node in tree –Then interchange root with larger of two children –Continue this with the resulting sub-tree(s) Result called a semiheap

20 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 20 Percolate Down Algorithm (for an array starting at 1—your handout has pseudocode for 0 based array) 1. Set c = 2 * r 2. While r <= n do following a. If c < n and myArray[c] < myArray[c + 1] Increment c by 1 b. If myArray[r] < myArray[c] i. Swap myArray[r] and myArray[c] ii. set r = c iii. Set c = 2 * c else Terminate repetition End while

21 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 21 Basic Heap Operations Insert an item –Amounts to a percolate up routine –Place new item at end of array –Interchange with parent so long as it is greater than its parent

22 Percolate Up for 0-based array PercolateUp(int leaf) Set p = parent index of leaf Set value = data at leaf index While leaf > 0 AND value < parent value –Change the leaf data to parent’s data –Set leaf index = parent index –Set p = new parent index of leaf Set data at final leaf position to value Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 22

23 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 23 Heapsort Given a list of numbers in an array –Stored in a complete binary tree Convert to a heap –Begin at last node not a leaf –Apply percolated down to this subtree –Continue

24 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 24 Heapsort Algorithm for converting a complete binary tree to a heap – called "heapify" For r = n/2 down to 1 : Apply percolate_down to the subtree in myArray[r ], … myArray[n] End for Puts largest element at root

25 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 25 Heapsort Now swap element 1 (root of tree) with last element –This puts largest element in correct location Use percolate down on remaining sublist –Converts from semi-heap to heap

26 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 26 Heapsort Again swap root with rightmost leaf Continue this process with shrinking sublist

27 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 27 Heapsort Algorithm 1. Consider x as a complete binary tree, use heapify to convert this tree to a heap 2. for i = n down to 2 : a. Interchange x[1] and x[i] (puts largest element at end) b. Apply percolate_down to convert binary tree corresponding to sublist in x[1].. x[i-1]

28 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 28 Heap Algorithms in STL Found in the library –make_heap() heapify –push_heap() insert –pop_heap() delete –sort_heap() heapsort Note program which illustrates these operations, Fig. 13.1Fig. 13.1

29 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 29 Priority Queue A collection of data elements –Items stored in order by priority –Higher priority items removed ahead of lower Operations –Constructor –Insert –Find, remove smallest/largest (priority) element –Replace –Change priority –Delete an item –Join two priority queues into a larger one

30 Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 30 Priority Queue Implementation possibilities –As a list (array, vector, linked list) –As an ordered list –Best is to use a heap Basic operations have O(log 2 n) time Java priority queue class uses heap

31 OSsim.java Simulates a (very slow!) "operating system" Each minute one task is processed Each minute 0, 1 or 2 tasks arrive –placed in PriorityQueue PQ –to be processed in a future minute Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 31

32 OSsim Animation Trace Table Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 32 PQ MinuteTask Dequeue'd Wait Time num Arrivals Tasks Enqueue'd 1--2new Task(0,1) new Task(1,1) (0,1) (1,1)

33 OSsim Animation Trace Table Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 33 PQ MinuteTask Dequeue'd Wait Time num Arrivals Tasks Enqueue'd 1212 - (0,1) -1 2222 new Task(0,1) new Task(1,1) new Task(0,2) new Task(0,2) (0,2) (0,2) (1,1)

34 OSsim Animation Trace Table Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 34 PQ MinuteTask Dequeue'd Wait Time num Arrivals Tasks Enqueue'd 123123 - (0,1) (0,2) -11-11 221221 new Task(0,1) new Task(1,1) new Task(0,2) new Task(0,2) new Task(1,3) (0,2) (1,1) (1,3)

35 OSsim Animation Trace Table Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 35 PQ MinuteTask Dequeue'd Wait Time num Arrivals Tasks Enqueue'd 12341234 - (0,1) (0,2) (0,2) -111-111 22102210 new Task(0,1) new Task(1,1) new Task(0,2) new Task(0,2) new Task(1,3) - (1,1) (1,3)

36 OSsim Animation Trace Table Nyhoff, ADTs, Data Structures and Problem Solving with C++, Second Edition, © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 0-13-140909-3 36 PQ MinuteTask Dequeue'd Wait Time num Arrivals Tasks Enqueue'd 1234512345 - (0,1) (0,2) (0,2) (1,1) -1114-1114 22100221000 new Task(0,1) new Task(1,1) new Task(0,2) new Task(0,2) new Task(1,3) - (1,3)


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