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Sections 4.3 (The master method) and 4.4 (Proof of the master theorem), pp. 73–90. Michael T. Goodrich and Roberto Tamassia. Algorithm Design: Foundation, Analysis, and Internet Examples. Wiley, 2002. ISBN 0-471-38365-1. The master theorem (including the version of Case 2 included here, which is stronger than the one from CLRS) is on pp. 268 ...
In mathematics, a theorem that covers a variety of cases is sometimes called a master theorem. Some theorems called master theorems in their fields include: Master theorem (analysis of algorithms), analyzing the asymptotic behavior of divide-and-conquer algorithms; Ramanujan's master theorem, providing an analytic expression for the Mellin ...
D. Foata and G.-N. Han, A new proof of the Garoufalidis-Lê-Zeilberger Quantum MacMahon Master Theorem, Journal of Algebra 307 (2007), no. 1, 424–431 . D. Foata and G.-N. Han, Specializations and extensions of the quantum MacMahon Master Theorem, Linear Algebra and its Applications 423 (2007), no. 2–3, 445–455 .
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For looking up a given entry in a given ordered list, both the binary and the linear search algorithm (which ignores ordering) can be used. The analysis of the former and the latter algorithm shows that it takes at most log 2 n and n check steps, respectively, for a list of size n.
In computer science, the Akra–Bazzi method, or Akra–Bazzi theorem, is used to analyze the asymptotic behavior of the mathematical recurrences that appear in the analysis of divide and conquer algorithms where the sub-problems have substantially different sizes.
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The formula above can be seen as a special case of the MacMahon master theorem. The right hand side can be interpreted as / where and = (, …,). On the left hand side, one can identify the complete homogeneous symmetric polynomials as special cases of the multinomial coefficient that appears in the MacMahon expression.