* Update giscus scroller. * Refine English docs and landing page * Sync the headings. * Update landing pages. * Update the avatar * Update Acknowledgements * Update landing pages. * Update contributors. * Update * Fix the formula formatting. * Fix the glossary. * Chapter 6. Hashing * Remove Chinese chars. * Fix headings. * Update giscus themes. * fallback to default giscus theme to solve 429 many requests error. * Add borders for callouts. * docs: sync character encoding translations * Update landing page media layout and i18n
3.0 KiB
Divide and Conquer Search Strategy
We have already learned that search algorithms are divided into two major categories.
- Brute-force search: Implemented by traversing the data structure, with a time complexity of
O(n). - Adaptive search: Leverages specific data organization or prior information, with time complexity reaching
O(\log n)or evenO(1).
In fact, search algorithms with time complexity of O(\log n) are typically implemented based on the divide and conquer strategy, such as binary search and trees.
- Each step of binary search divides the problem (searching for a target element in an array) into a smaller problem (searching for the target element in half of the array), continuing until the array is empty or the target element is found.
- Trees are representative of the divide and conquer idea. In data structures such as binary search trees, AVL trees, and heaps, the time complexity of various operations is
O(\log n).
The divide and conquer strategy of binary search is as follows.
- The problem can be decomposed: Binary search recursively decomposes the original problem (searching in an array) into subproblems (searching in half of the array), achieved by comparing the middle element with the target element.
- Subproblems are independent: In binary search, each round only processes one subproblem, which is not affected by other subproblems.
- Solutions of subproblems do not need to be merged: Binary search aims to find a specific element, so there is no need to merge the solutions of subproblems. When a subproblem is solved, the original problem is also solved.
Divide and conquer can improve search efficiency because brute-force search can only eliminate one option per round, while divide and conquer search can eliminate half of the options per round.
Implementing Binary Search Based on Divide and Conquer
In previous sections, binary search was implemented based on iteration. Now we implement it based on divide and conquer (recursion).
!!! question
Given a sorted array `nums` of length $n$, where all elements are unique, find `target`.
From a divide and conquer perspective, we denote the subproblem corresponding to the search interval [i, j] as f(i, j).
Starting from the original problem f(0, n-1), perform binary search through the following steps.
- Calculate the midpoint
mof the search interval[i, j], and use it to eliminate half of the search interval. - Recursively solve the subproblem reduced by half in size, which could be
f(i, m-1)orf(m+1, j). - Repeat steps
1.and2.untiltargetis found, or return when the interval is empty.
The figure below shows the divide and conquer process of binary search for element 6 in an array.
In the implementation code, we declare a recursive function dfs() to solve the problem f(i, j):
[file]{binary_search_recur}-[class]{}-[func]{binary_search}
