cop3530 quiz 7

Pataasin ang iyong marka sa homework at exams ngayon gamit ang Quizwiz!

what is a set?

A collection that contains no duplicate elements set objects: - are not indexed - do not reveal the order of insertion of items - do enable efficient search and retrieval of information - do allow removal of elements without moving other elements around

what is bubble sort?

- "simplest sorting algorithm" - "bubble" the largest element to the end continually, works by repeatedly swapping adjacent elements if they are in the wrong order to sort: - check the current element against its adjacent/next element - swap if the current element is larger (this will bubble the largest element up setting it into its "sorted" position) - repeat until no swaps occured

what are the 3 conditions for hash functions?

- should be able to evenly distribute the data - should be easy to compute - should be deterministic (not random; same key results in same output)

what is heapsort?

-builds a max heap from the array in-place, then pops elements one-by-one -building heap is O(n), then every pop is O(log(n)): O(1) to remove and then O(log(n)) to heapify time: worst/avg/best: O(nlog(n)) space: O(1)

what is a hash table?

-data structure in which data values are mapped to buckets based on keys -uses a hash function to compute an index (a hash code) which maps to a "bucket" containing value -values are places into their bucker using collision resolution policies -hash tables are unordered -a hash function is used to compute an index into an array of buckets

what is quick sort

-repeatedly splits the array around a pivot element and sorts elements around it -a type of divide and conquer algo -divide: selects a pivot element that splits the array, less than pivot part and greater than pivot part - conquer: recursively sort the two sub arrays - can have various implementations based on how you choose the pivot

what are maps?

collection of (key, value) pairs where key is unique

how does selection sort work?

maintains two subarrays: - a sorted subarray at beginning - a remaining unsorted subarray at end to sort: - "select" the minimum in the sorted part by iterating through it - move the minimum to the end of the sorted part - consider the minimum as now part of the sorted array - repeat till unsorted has size of 1

can you access a set's element by index? ex: set[index]

no!

how does a map print?

ordered: prints in order of keys (if unordered it does not print in any order)

what are some other examples of sorts?

sleep sort, counting sort, tim sort, radix sort, bucket sort

selections sort time complexity and space complexity

time: - worst/average/best: O(n^2) - will always have 2 nested for loops that iterate O(n) space: - O(1), in place sort

bubble sort time and space complexity

time: -worst/average: O(n^2), two nested loops, each O(n) -best: O(n), no swaps, break early space: -O(1), in place sort

merge sort time and space complexity

time: -worst/avg/best: o(nlog(n)) -repeatedly halving the array (O(log(n)), merge() compares each of the n elements space: -due to the arrays made for merging, space complexity is O(n)

what are the problems with tree based maps and sets?

- if the datatypes are comparable such as integers or characters, tree based maps and sets make sense. what if the data itself is incomparible? -common operations such as insert or search are O(logn). can we do better than this?

time and space complexity of quick sort

- moving elements around a pivot takes O(n) - how we choose a pivot can determine the number of recursive calls - good pivot: divides the array exactly in half -> O(logn) - bad pivot: divides the array into 1 and n - 1 -> O(n) - the stack frame lead to O(logn) space complexity time: worst: O(n^2) avg/best: O(nlog(n)) space: O(log(n))

what is shell sort?

-an optimization of insertion sort -first sorts the elements far apart from each other, then successively reduces the interval between the elements sorted -(n/2, n/4...1) -implementation depends on gap size choice -best gap size is still debated and time complexity can vary

what operations do sets support?

A and B (only values that they share), A or B (all values), in A but not in A (A-B), A is a subset of B (A < (this but like a U) B)

what is an ordered set implemented as? what is the time complexity?

BST, O(log(n))

what is an ordered map implemented as, what is the time complexity of insert and []?

BST, O(log(n)) for both

which are valid hash function examples? of the valid ones, are they good or not? H(x): {return 0} H(x): {return sum of all ASCII values} H(x): {return powers of 31 with ASCII} H(x): {return Random Number} H(x): {return Current Time}

H(x): {return 0} poor H(x): {return sum of all ASCII values} okay H(x): {return powers of 31 with ASCII} good

what are examples of O(n^2) sorting algorithms, O(nlog(n)) sorting algorithms, and sorting algorithms that are neither time complexity?

O(n^2): selection, bubble, insertion O(nlog(n)): merge, quick, heap other: shell

what is merge sort?

a type of divide and conquer algo divide and conquer - divide: split the problem into subproblems - conquer: solve the subproblems through recursion - combine: used the solved subproblems for the current problem merge sort: - divide: split the input arrays in two halves - conquer: sort each half through recursion - knowing that each half is sorted, merge the arrays into one sorted array

what is the best, avg, and worst time complexities for hashmap insertion, deletion, and search?

best/avg: O(1) worst: O(n), also in some cases rehashing is needed for insertion

which of the following are considered O(n2) sorting algorithms in their average time complexity? -bubble sort -quicksort -selection sort -heap sort

bubble, selection

what is separate chaining?

each bucket stores a linked list; collisions are simply appended to the end of the list

what is open addressing (linear probing)

each bucket stores only one entry; if you try to add an entry and there is a collision, move the "problem" entry (one bucket at a time) to the next available free bucket and put it there

what are the benefits of a good hash function?

evenly distribute data be easy to compute

what is an unordered set implemented as? what is its time complexity?

hash table, O(1) (+ O(k) for hash)

what is an unordered map implemented as? what is its time complexity for insert and []?

hash table, avg case: O(1)

what are the properties of a hash function

input: object x output: an integer representation of x if x is equal to y, H(x) = H(y) if x is not equal to y, it would be great if H(x) is not equal to H(y)

what are the methods of an ordered set?

insert(element) - adds element erase(element) - removed element find(element) - returns iterator to element if it is found, or returns an iterator to std::end otherwise count(element) - returns 1 if element is found or 0 otherwise size() - gives number of elements in set empty() - returns if set is empty or not

what are the methods of ordered maps?

insert(key, value) - if key already exists in map, returns false otherwise inserts new entry with key,value pair map[key] = value - if key already exists in map, overwrites with new value erase(key) - deletes key in map find(key) - searches for key in map, and returns iterator to it if found; otherwise returns iterator to map::end() count(key) - returns 1 if key is found in map or 0 otherwise size() - gives number of elements in map empty() - returns if maps is empty or not

what if we use an array and insert integers? what are the time complexities of insert and find, and what are the problems? how can we do this with strings?

insert: O(1) find: O(1) wastes memory and what about other data types? convert a letter to a number and multiply by s power of 27

what is the purpose of a hash function?

is used to distribute entries across a hash table represented as an array

what is a load factor?

it is a way to describe how funcll the hash table is becoming, it equals # entries / # buckets

what are some common hash functions

key mod table size, mid square hashing, string hashing

how does insertion sort work?

maintains two subarrays: - a sorted subarray at the beginning - remaining unsorted subarray at the end to sort: - grab the first element in the unsorted part - iterate through the sorted part to find where to "insert" the new element - repeat till unsorted has size 1

which of the following is not an in-place sorting algorithm? -selection sort -heap sort -quick sort -merge sort

merge sort

bad/invalid hash functions will?

produce different outputs for the same input take lots of time result in high potential for data collisions

which algorithm sorts by repeatedly moving elements around a pivot?

quicksort

what type of BST is an ordered map implemented as

red black tree

what is open addressing (quadratic probing)

same as linear probing, except you move the "problem" entry 1 bucket, then by 4 buckets, then by 9 buckets, then by 16

what are the methods of unordered maps?

same as ordered maps + 2 new bucket_count() - # buckets load_factor() - # elements / # buckets

what are the methods of an unsorted set?

same as orderedt set, + 2 new bucket_count() - # buckets load_factor() - # elements / # buckets

what are some collision resolution policies?

separate chaining, open addressing with linear or quadratic probing

what is the time complexity and space complexity for insertion sort?

time: - worst/average: O(n^2), two nested for loops each O(n) - best: O(n), if the key is greater than all sorted values, the data is already sorted and the inner loop is bypassed space: - O(1), in place sort

what should we do if load factor becomes too larege?

we should dynamically resize the table, and rehash our values to reduce the load_factor -> making our table more time efficient

what is a problem with linear probing?

we suffer from "clustering" which can be solved by using quadratic probing instead

what is a data collision?

when one thing that we try to insert hashes to the same value than an existing value does


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