enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Breadth-first search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breadth-first_search

    Breadth-first search (BFS) is an algorithm for searching a tree data structure for a node that satisfies a given property. It starts at the tree root and explores all nodes at the present depth prior to moving on to the nodes at the next depth level.

  3. Tree traversal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_traversal

    By contrast, a breadth-first search will never reach the grandchildren, as it seeks to exhaust the children first. A more sophisticated analysis of running time can be given via infinite ordinal numbers ; for example, the breadth-first search of the depth 2 tree above will take ω ·2 steps: ω for the first level, and then another ω for the ...

  4. Parallel breadth-first search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_breadth-first_search

    The following pseudo-code of a 1-D distributed memory BFS [5] was originally designed for IBM BlueGene/L systems, which have a 3D torus network architecture. Because the synchronization is the main extra cost for parallelized BFS, the authors of this paper also developed a scalable all-to-all communication based on point-to-point communications .

  5. List of NP-complete problems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_NP-complete_problems

    Examples include biological or social networks, which contain hundreds, thousands and even billions of nodes in some cases (e.g. Facebook or LinkedIn). 1-planarity [1] 3-dimensional matching [2] [3]: SP1 Bandwidth problem [3]: GT40 Bipartite dimension [3]: GT18 Capacitated minimum spanning tree [3]: ND5

  6. Depth-first search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depth-first_search

    The recursive implementation will visit the nodes from the example graph in the following order: A, B, D, F, E, C, G. The non-recursive implementation will visit the nodes as: A, E, F, B, D, C, G. The non-recursive implementation is similar to breadth-first search but differs from it in two ways: it uses a stack instead of a queue, and

  7. Dinic's algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinic's_algorithm

    Even and Itai also contributed to this algorithm by combining BFS and DFS, which is how the algorithm is now commonly presented. [ 2 ] For about 10 years of time after the Ford–Fulkerson algorithm was invented, it was unknown if it could be made to terminate in polynomial time in the general case of irrational edge capacities.

  8. Lexicographic breadth-first search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexicographic_breadth...

    The algorithm is called lexicographic breadth-first search because the order it produces is an ordering that could also have been produced by a breadth-first search, and because if the ordering is used to index the rows and columns of an adjacency matrix of a graph then the algorithm sorts the rows and columns into lexicographical order.

  9. Tarjan's strongly connected components algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarjan's_strongly_connected...

    Any vertex that is not on a directed cycle forms a strongly connected component all by itself: for example, a vertex whose in-degree or out-degree is 0, or any vertex of an acyclic graph. The basic idea of the algorithm is this: a depth-first search (DFS) begins from an arbitrary start node (and subsequent depth-first searches are conducted on ...