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For example, for the array of values [−2, 1, −3, 4, −1, 2, 1, −5, 4], the contiguous subarray with the largest sum is [4, −1, 2, 1], with sum 6. Some properties of this problem are: If the array contains all non-negative numbers, then the problem is trivial; a maximum subarray is the entire array.
The maximum clique problem is the special case in which all weights are equal. [15] As well as the problem of optimizing the sum of weights, other more complicated bicriterion optimization problems have also been studied. [16] In the maximal clique listing problem, the input is an undirected graph, and the output is a list of all its maximal ...
Identifying the in-place algorithms with L has some interesting implications; for example, it means that there is a (rather complex) in-place algorithm to determine whether a path exists between two nodes in an undirected graph, [3] a problem that requires O(n) extra space using typical algorithms such as depth-first search (a visited bit for ...
Illustration of Dijkstra's algorithm finding a path from a start node (lower left, red) to a target node (upper right, green) in a robot motion planning problem. Open nodes represent the "tentative" set (aka set of "unvisited" nodes). Filled nodes are the visited ones, with color representing the distance: the redder, the closer (to the start ...
function lookupByPositionIndex(i) node ← head i ← i + 1 # don't count the head as a step for level from top to bottom do while i ≥ node.width[level] do # if next step is not too far i ← i - node.width[level] # subtract the current width node ← node.next[level] # traverse forward at the current level repeat repeat return node.value end ...
A Fenwick tree or binary indexed tree (BIT) is a data structure that stores an array of values and can efficiently compute prefix sums of the values and update the values. It also supports an efficient rank-search operation for finding the longest prefix whose sum is no more than a specified value.
The query algorithm visits one node per level of the tree, so O(log n) nodes in total. On the other hand, at a node v, the segments in I are reported in O(1 + k v) time, where k v is the number of intervals at node v, reported. The sum of all the k v for all nodes v visited, is k, the number of reported segments. [5]
The sum-product conjecture informally says that one of the sum set or the product set of any set must be nearly as large as possible. It was originally conjectured by Erdős in 1974 to hold whether A is a set of integers, reals, or complex numbers. [3] More precisely, it proposes that, for any set A ⊂ ℂ, one has