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Ch3 Algorithm Analysis

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Ch3 Algorithm Analysis

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hqh2042003
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Analysis of Algorithms

Input Algorithm Output

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 1
Running Time
 Most algorithms best case
transform input objects average case
worst case
into output objects. 120
 The running time of an 100
algorithm typically grows

Running Time
80
with the input size.
 Average case time is 60

often difficult to 40

determine. 20
 We focus on the worst 0
case running time. 1000 2000 3000 4000
I nput Size
 Easier to analyze
 Crucial to applications such

as games, finance and


© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
robotics
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 2
Experimental Studies
 Write a program 9000

implementing the 8000


algorithm 7000
 Run the program with 6000
inputs of varying size

Time (ms)
5000
and composition, noting
4000
the time needed:
3000

2000

1000

0
0 50 100
 Plot the results I nput Size
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 3
Limitations of Experiments
 It is necessary to implement the
algorithm, which may be difficult
 Results may not be indicative of the
running time on other inputs not
included in the experiment.
 In order to compare two algorithms,
the same hardware and software
environments must be used

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 4
Theoretical Analysis
 Uses a high-level description of the
algorithm instead of an
implementation
 Characterizes running time as a
function of the input size, n.
 Takes into account all possible inputs
 Allows us to evaluate the speed of an
algorithm independent of the
hardware/software environment
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 5
Pseudocode
 High-level description of an
algorithm
 More structured than English prose
 Less detailed than a program
 Preferred notation for describing
algorithms
 Hides program design issues

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 6
Pseudocode Details
 Control flow  Method call
 if … then … [else …] method (arg [, arg…])
 while … do …  Return value
 repeat … until … return expression
 for … do …  Expressions:
 Indentation replaces  Assignment
braces
 Equality testing
 Method declaration
Algorithm method (arg [, arg…]) n2 Superscripts and
Input … other mathematical
formatting allowed
Output …
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 7
The Random Access Machine
(RAM) Model
 A CPU

 An potentially
unbounded bank of 2
1
memory cells, each of 0
which can hold an
arbitrary number or
character
Memory cells are numbered and
accessing any cell in memory takes
unit time. Analysis of Algorithms
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser 8
Seven Important Functions
 Seven functions that
often appear in 1E+30
1E+28 Cubic
algorithm analysis: 1E+26
 Constant  1 1E+24 Quadratic
 Logarithmic  log n 1E+22 Linear
1E+20
 Linear  n 1E+18
N-Log-N  n log n 1E+16
T (n )

1E+14
 Quadratic  n2 1E+12
 Cubic  n3 1E+10
 Exponential  2n 1E+8
1E+6
1E+4
 In a log-log chart, the 1E+2
slope of the line 1E+0
corresponds to the 1E+0 1E+2 1E+4 1E+6 1E+8 1E+10
n
growth rate
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 9
Slide by Matt
Functions Graphed Stallmann included
with permission.
Using “Normal” Scale
g(n) = n lg n
g(n) = 1 g(n) = 2n

g(n) = n2
g(n) = lg n

g(n) = n
g(n) = n3

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 10
Primitive Operations
 Basic computations
performed by an algorithm
 Examples:
 Evaluating an
 Identifiable in pseudocode expression
 Largely independent from  Assigning a
the programming language value to a
variable
 Exact definition not  Indexing into an
important (we will see why
array
later)  Calling a method
 Assumed to take a constant  Returning from a
amount of time in the RAM method
model
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 11
Counting Primitive
Operations
 By inspecting the pseudocode, we can determine the
maximum number of primitive operations executed by
an algorithm, as a function of the input size

 Step 1: 2 ops, 3: 2 ops, 4: 2n ops, 5: 2n


ops, 6: 0 to n ops, 7: 1 op
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 12
Estimating Running Time
 Algorithm find_max executes 5n  5 primitive
operations in the worst case, 4n  5 in the
best case. Define:
a = Time taken by the fastest primitive operation
b = Time taken by the slowest primitive operation
 Let T(n) be worst-case time of find_max. Then
a (4n  5)  T(n)  b(5n  5)
 Hence, the running time T(n) is bounded by
two linear functions.

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 13
Growth Rate of Running
Time
 Changing the hardware/ software
environment
 Affects T(n) by a constant factor, but
 Does not alter the growth rate of T(n)
 The linear growth rate of the
running time T(n) is an intrinsic
property of algorithm find_max

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 14
Slide by Matt
Stallmann included
with permission.
Why Growth Rate Matters
if runtime
time for n + 1 time for 2 n time for 4 n
is...

c lg n c lg (n + 1) c (lg n + 1) c(lg n + 2)

cn c (n + 1) 2c n 4c n

~ c n lg n 2c n lg n + 4c n lg n + runtime
c n lg n quadruple
+ cn 2cn 4cn
s
c n2 ~ c n2 + 2c n 4c n2 16c n2 when
problem
c n3 ~ c n3 + 3c n2 8c n3 64c n3 size
doubles
c 2n c 2 n+1 c 2 2n c 2 4n
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 15
Slide by Matt
Stallmann included
with permission.
Comparison of Two Algorithms
insertion sort is
n2 / 4
merge sort is
2 n lg n
sort a million items?
insertion sort takes
roughly 70 hours
while
merge sort takes
roughly 40 seconds

This is a slow machine, but if


100 x as fast then it’s 40 minutes
versus less than 0.5 seconds
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 16
Constant Factors
1E+26
 The growth rate 1E+24 Quadratic
Quadratic
is not affected by 1E+22
1E+20 Linear
 constant factors
1E+18 Linear
or 1E+16
 lower-order terms 1E+14
T (n )
1E+12
 Examples 1E+10
1E+8
 102n  105 is a
1E+6
linear function 1E+4
 105n2  108n is a 1E+2
1E+0
quadratic function
1E+0 1E+2 1E+4 1E+6 1E+8 1E+10
n

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 17
Big-Oh Notation
10,000
 Given functions f(n) 3n
and g(n), we say that 2n+10
1,000
f(n) is O(g(n)) if there
are positive constants n

c and n0 such that 100

f(n)  cg(n) for n  n0


10
 Example: 2n  10 is O(n)
 2n  10  cn
 (c  2) n 10 1
1 10 100 1,000
 n 10(c  2) n
 Pick c 3 and n0 10

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 18
Big-Oh Example
1,000,000
n^2
 Example: the 100n
100,000
function n2 is not 10n
O(n) 10,000 n
 n2  cn
 nc 1,000
 The above
100
inequality cannot be
satisfied since c
10
must be a constant
1
1 10 100 1,000
n
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 19
More Big-Oh
Examples
7n-2
7n-2 is O(n)
need c > 0 and n0  1 such that 7n-2  c•n for n  n0
this is true for c = 7 and n0 = 1
 3n3 + 20n2 + 5
3n3 + 20n2 + 5 is O(n3)
need c > 0 and n0  1 such that 3n3 + 20n2 + 5  c•n3 for n
 n0
this is true
3 log n for
+5 c = 4 and n0 = 21

3 log n + 5 is O(log n)
need c > 0 and n0  1 such that 3 log n + 5  c•log n for n 
n0
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
this is true for c =
Goldwasser 8 andAnalysis
n0 = of 2 Algorithms 20
Big-Oh and Growth Rate
 The big-Oh notation gives an upper bound on the
growth rate of a function
 The statement “f(n) is O(g(n))” means that the
growth rate of f(n) is no more than the growth rate
of g(n)
 We can use the big-Oh notation to rank functions
according to their growth rate
f(n) is O(g(n)) g(n) is O(f(n))
g(n) grows Yes No
more
f(n) grows more No Yes
Same growth
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia, Yes Yes
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 21
Big-Oh Rules

 If is f(n) a polynomial of degree d, then f(n)


is O(nd), i.e.,
 Drop lower-order terms
 Drop constant factors
 Use the smallest possible class of functions
 Say “2n is O(n)” instead of “2n is O(n2)”
 Use the simplest expression of the class
 Say “3n  5 is O(n)” instead of “3n  5 is O(3n)”

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 22
Asymptotic Algorithm
Analysis
 The asymptotic analysis of an algorithm
determines the running time in big-Oh notation
 To perform the asymptotic analysis
 We find the worst-case number of primitive
operations executed as a function of the input size
 We express this function with big-Oh notation
 Example:
 We say that algorithm find_max “runs in O(n) time”
 Since constant factors and lower-order terms
are eventually dropped anyhow, we can
disregard them when counting primitive
operations

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 23
Computing Prefix
Averages
 We further illustrate
35
asymptotic analysis with X
two algorithms for prefix 30 A
averages
25
 The i-th prefix average of

an array X is average of 20
the first (i  1) elements of 15
X:
10
A[i] X[0]  X[1]  …  X[i])/(i+1)
5
 Computing the array A of
prefix averages of another 0
array X has applications to 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
financial analysis
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 24
Prefix Averages
(Quadratic)
The following algorithm computes prefix
averages in quadratic time by applying the
definition

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 25
Arithmetic Progression
7
 The running time of
6
prefixAverage1 is
O(1 2 …n) 5
 The sum of the first n 4
integers is n(n 1) 2 3
 There is a simple
visual proof of this fact 2
 Thus, algorithm 1
prefixAverage1 runs in 0
O(n2) time
1 2 3 4 5 6

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 26
Prefix Averages 2 (Looks
Better)
The following algorithm uses an internal Python
function to simplify the code

Algorithm prefixAverage2 still runs in O(n2)


time!
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 27
Prefix Averages 3 (Linear
Time)
The following algorithm computes prefix
averages in linear time by keeping a running
sum

Algorithm prefixAverage3 runs in O(n) time


© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 28
Math you need to Review
Summations
Logarithms and Exponents
 properties of logarithms:
logb(xy) = logbx + logby
logb (x/y) = logbx - logby
logbxa = alogbx
logba = logxa/logxb
 properties of exponentials:
a(b+c) = aba c
abc = (ab)c
Proof techniques ab /ac = a(b-c)
Basic probability b = a logab
bc = a c*logab

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 29
Relatives of Big-Oh
big-Omega
 f(n) is (g(n)) if there is a constant c > 0

and an integer constant n0  1 such that


f(n)  c•g(n) for n  n0

big-Theta
 f(n) is (g(n)) if there are constants c’ > 0

and c’’ > 0 and an integer constant n0  1


such that c’•g(n)  f(n)  c’’•g(n) for n  n0

© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,


Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 30
Intuition for
Asymptotic Notation
Big-Oh
 f(n) is O(g(n)) if f(n) is

asymptotically less than or equal


to g(n)
big-Omega
 f(n) is (g(n)) if f(n) is

asymptotically greater than or


equal to g(n)
big-Theta
 f(n) is (g(n)) if f(n) is

asymptotically equal to g(n)


© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 31
Example Uses of
the Relatives of
Big-Oh
 5n2 is (n2)
f(n) is (g(n)) if there is a constant c > 0 and an integer constant n0  1
such that f(n)  c•g(n) for n  n0
let c = 5 and n0 = 1
 5n2 is (n)
f(n) is (g(n)) if there is a constant c > 0 and an integer constant n0  1
such that f(n)  c•g(n) for n  n0
let c = 1 and n0 = 1
 5n2 is (n2)
f(n) is (g(n)) if it is (n2) and O(n2). We have already seen the former,
for the latter recall that f(n) is O(g(n)) if there is a constant c > 0 and
an integer constant n0  1 such that f(n) < c•g(n) for n  n0
Let c = 5 and n0 = 1
© 2013 Goodrich, Tamassia,
Goldwasser Analysis of Algorithms 32

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