Strings
Strings
String Searching
The previous slide is not a great example of what is meant by String Searching. Nor is it meant to ridicule people without eyes.... The object of string searching is to find the location of a specific text pattern within a larger body of text (e.g., a sentence, a paragraph, a book, etc.). As with most algorithms, the main considerations for string searching are speed and efficiency. There are a number of string searching algorithms in existence today, but the three we shall review are Brute Force,Rabin-Karp, and Knuth-Morris-Pratt. 2
Brute Force
The Brute Force algorithm compares the pattern to the text, one character at a time, until unmatching characters are found
Compared characters are italicized. Correct matches are in boldface type. The algorithm can be designed to stop on either the first occurrence of the pattern, or upon reaching the end of the text.
Given a pattern M characters in length, and a text N characters in length... Worst case: compares pattern to each substring of text of length M. For example, M=5. This kind of case can occur for image data.
Brute Force-Complexity
Brute Force-Complexity(cont.)
Given a pattern M characters in length, and a text N characters in length... Best case if pattern found: Finds pattern in first M positions of text. For example, M=5.
Brute Force-Complexity(cont.)
Given a pattern M characters in length, and a text N characters in length... Best case if pattern not found: Always mismatch on first character. For example, M=5.
Rabin-Karp
The Rabin-Karp string searching algorithm calculates a hash value for the pattern, and for each M-character subsequence of text to be compared. If the hash values are unequal, the algorithm will calculate the hash value for next M-character sequence. If the hash values are equal, the algorithm will do a Brute Force comparison between the pattern and the M-character sequence. In this way, there is only one comparison per text subsequence, and Brute Force is only needed when hash values match. Perhaps an example will clarify some things...
8
Rabin-Karp Example
Hash value of AAAAA is 37 Hash value of AAAAH is 100
Rabin-Karp Algorithm
pattern is M characters long hash_p=hash value of pattern hash_t=hash value of first M letters in body of text do if (hash_p == hash_t) brute force comparison of pattern and selected section of text hash_t= hash value of next section of text, one character over while (end of text or brute force comparison == true)
10
Rabin-Karp
Common Rabin-Karp questions: What is the hash function used to calculate values for character sequences? Isnt it time consuming to hash very one of the M-character sequences in the text body? Is this going to be on the final? To answer some of these questions, well have to get mathematical.
11
Rabin-Karp Math
Consider an M-character sequence as an M-digit number in base b, where b is the number of letters in the alphabet. The text subsequence t[i .. i+M-1] is mapped to the number
Furthermore, given x(i) we can compute x(i+1) for the next subsequence t[i+1 .. i+M] in constant time, as follows:
In this way, we never explicitly compute a new value. We simply adjust the existing value as we move over one character.
12
Lets say that our alphabet consists of 10 letters. our alphabet = a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j Lets say that a corresponds to 1, b corresponds to 2 and so on. The hash value for string cah would be ... 3*100 + 1*10 + 8*1 = 318
13
reason, we hash the value by taking it mod a prime number q. The mod function (% in Java) is particularly useful in this case due to several of its inherent properties: [(x mod q) + (y mod q)] mod q = (x+y) mod q (x mod q) mod q = x mod q For these reasons: h(i)=((t[i] bM-1 mod q) +(t[i+1] bM-2 mod q) + ... +(t[i+M-1] mod q))mod q h(i+1) =( h(i) b mod q Shift left one digit -t[i] bM mod q Subtract leftmost digit +t[i+M] mod q ) Add new rightmost digit 14 mod q
Rabin-Karp Mods If M is large, then the resulting value (~bM) will be enormous. For this
Rabin-Karp Complexity
If a sufficiently large prime number is used for the hash function, the hashed values of two different patterns will usually be distinct. If this is the case, searching takes O(N) time, where N is the number of characters in the larger body of text. It is always possible to construct a scenario with a worst case complexity of O(MN). This, however, is likely to happen only if the prime number used for hashing is small.
15
This shows how much of the beginning of the string matches up to the
portion immediately preceding a failed comparison. -if the comparison fails at (4), we know the a,b in positions 2,3 is identical 16 to positions 0,1
Algorithm KMPMatch(T,P) Input: Strings T (text) with n characters and P (pattern) with m characters. Output: Starting index of the first substring of T matching P, or an indication that P is not a substring of T.
17
Algorithm
f KMPFailureFunction(P) {build failure function} i0 j0 while i < n do if P[j] = T[i] then if j = m - 1 then return i - m - 1 {a match} ii+1 jj+1 else if j > 0 then {no match, but we have advanced} j f(j-1) {j indexes just after matching prefix in P} else ii+1 return There is no substring of T matching P
18
19
Algorithm
f KMPFailureFunction(P) {build failure function} i0 j0 while i m-1 do if P[j] = T[i] then if j = m - 1 then { we have matched j+1 characters} f(i) j + 1 ii+1 jj+1 else if j > 0 then j f(j-1) {j indexes just after matching prefix in P} else {there is no match} f(i) 0 ii+1 20
21
Thus, each time through the loop, either i or k increases by at least 1, so the greatest possible number of loops is 2n This of course assumes that f has already been computed. However, f is computed in much the same manner as KMPMatch so the time complexity argument is analogous. KMPFailureFunction is O(m) 22 Total Time Complexity: O(n + m)
Regular Expressions
notation for describing a set of strings, possibly of infinite size denotes the empty string ab + c denotes the set {ab, c} a* denotes the set {, a, aa, aaa, ...} Examples
(a+b)* all the strings from the alphabet {a,b} b*(ab*a)*b* strings with an even number of as (a+b)*sun(a+b)* strings containing the pattern sun (a+b)(a+b)(a+b)a 4-letter strings ending in a
23