0% found this document useful (0 votes)
138 views

Insertion Sort Bubble Sort Selection Sort

The document discusses insertion sort, including: 1) Insertion sort works by building up a sorted sequence from left to right at each step taking the next item and inserting it into the sorted place in the sequence. 2) The analysis shows that insertion sort runs in O(n^2) time in the worst case when the array is reverse sorted, as it may need to compare each item to be inserted to all previous items. 3) In the best case of a sorted array, insertion sort runs in O(n) time as each insertion only requires a single comparison.

Uploaded by

Anitha
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
138 views

Insertion Sort Bubble Sort Selection Sort

The document discusses insertion sort, including: 1) Insertion sort works by building up a sorted sequence from left to right at each step taking the next item and inserting it into the sorted place in the sequence. 2) The analysis shows that insertion sort runs in O(n^2) time in the worst case when the array is reverse sorted, as it may need to compare each item to be inserted to all previous items. 3) In the best case of a sorted array, insertion sort runs in O(n) time as each insertion only requires a single comparison.

Uploaded by

Anitha
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 31

Analysis of Algorithms

CS 477/677

Sorting – Part A
Instructor: George Bebis

(Chapter 2)
The Sorting Problem

• Input:

– A sequence of n numbers a1, a2, . . . , an

• Output:

– A permutation (reordering) a1’, a2’, . . . , an’ of the input

sequence such that a1’ ≤ a2’ ≤ · · · ≤ an’

2
Structure of data

3
Why Study Sorting Algorithms?
• There are a variety of situations that we can
encounter
– Do we have randomly ordered keys?
– Are all keys distinct?
– How large is the set of keys to be ordered?
– Need guaranteed performance?

• Various algorithms are better suited to some of


these situations

4
Some Definitions
• Internal Sort
– The data to be sorted is all stored in the computer’s
main memory.
• External Sort
– Some of the data to be sorted might be stored in
some external, slower, device.
• In Place Sort
– The amount of extra space required to sort the data is
constant with the input size.

5
Stability
• A STABLE sort preserves relative order of records with
equal keys
Sorted on first key:

Sort file on second key:

Records with key value


3 are not in order on
first key!!

6
Insertion Sort
• Idea: like sorting a hand of playing cards
– Start with an empty left hand and the cards facing
down on the table.
– Remove one card at a time from the table, and insert
it into the correct position in the left hand
• compare it with each of the cards already in the hand, from
right to left
– The cards held in the left hand are sorted
• these cards were originally the top cards of the pile on the
table

7
Insertion Sort

To insert 12, we need to


make room for it by moving
first 36 and then 24.

8
Insertion Sort

9
Insertion Sort

10
Insertion Sort

input array

5 2 4 6 1 3

at each iteration, the array is divided in two sub-arrays:

left sub-array right sub-array

sorted unsorted

11
Insertion Sort

12
INSERTION-SORT
Alg.: INSERTION-SORT(A) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

for j ← 2 to n a1 a2 a3 a4 a5 a6 a7 a8

do key ← A[ j ] key
Insert A[ j ] into the sorted sequence A[1 . . j -1]
i←j-1
while i > 0 and A[i] > key
do A[i + 1] ← A[i]
i←i–1
A[i + 1] ← key
• Insertion sort – sorts the elements in place
13
Loop Invariant for Insertion Sort

Alg.: INSERTION-SORT(A)
for j ← 2 to n
do key ← A[ j ]
Insert A[ j ] into the sorted sequence A[1 . . j -1]

i←j-1
while i > 0 and A[i] > key
do A[i + 1] ← A[i]
i←i–1
A[i + 1] ← key

Invariant: at the start of the for loop the elements in A[1 . . j-1]
are in sorted order
14
Proving Loop Invariants
• Proving loop invariants works like induction
• Initialization (base case):
– It is true prior to the first iteration of the loop
• Maintenance (inductive step):
– If it is true before an iteration of the loop, it remains true before
the next iteration
• Termination:
– When the loop terminates, the invariant gives us a useful
property that helps show that the algorithm is correct
– Stop the induction when the loop terminates

15
Loop Invariant for Insertion Sort
• Initialization:
– Just before the first iteration, j = 2:
the subarray A[1 . . j-1] = A[1],
(the element originally in A[1]) – is
sorted

16
Loop Invariant for Insertion Sort
• Maintenance:
– the while inner loop moves A[j -1], A[j -2], A[j -3],
and so on, by one position to the right until the proper
position for key (which has the value that started out in
A[j]) is found
– At that point, the value of key is placed into this
position.

17
Loop Invariant for Insertion Sort
• Termination:
– The outer for loop ends when j = n + 1  j-1 = n
– Replace n with j-1 in the loop invariant:
• the subarray A[1 . . n] consists of the elements originally in
A[1 . . n], but in sorted order
j-1 j

• The entire array is sorted!

Invariant: at the start of the for loop the elements in A[1 . . j-1]
are in sorted order
18
Analysis of Insertion Sort
INSERTION-SORT(A) cost times
for j ← 2 to n c1 n
do key ← A[ j ] c2 n-1
Insert A[ j ] into the sorted sequence A[1 . . j -1] 0 n-1
i←j-1 c4 n-1

n
while i > 0 and A[i] > key c5 j 2 j
t
c6 
n
do A[i + 1] ← A[i] j 2
(t j  1)
c7 
n
i←i–1 j 2
(t j  1)
A[i + 1] ← key c8 n-1
tj: # of times the while statement is executed at iteration j

T (n)  c1n  c2 (n  1)  c4 (n  1)  c5  t j  c6  t j  1  c7  t j  1  c8 (n  1)
n n n

j 2 j 2 j 2
19
Best Case Analysis
• The array is already sorted “while i > 0 and A[i] > key”
– A[i] ≤ key upon the first time the while loop test is run
(when i = j -1)

– tj = 1

• T(n) = c1n + c2(n -1) + c4(n -1) + c5(n -1) + c8(n-1)


= (c1 + c2 + c4 + c5 + c8)n + (c2 + c4 + c5 + c8)

= an + b = (n)
T (n)  c1n  c2 (n  1)  c4 (n  1)  c5  t j  c6  t j  1  c7  t j  1  c8 (n  1)
n n n

j 2 j 2 j 2
20
Worst Case Analysis
• The array is in reverse sorted order“while i > 0 and A[i] > key”
– Always A[i] > key in while loop test
– Have to compare key with all elements to the left of the j-th
position  compare with j-1 elements  tj = j
n
n(n  1) n
n(n  1) n
n(n  1)
using 
j 1
j
2
  j 
j 2 2
 1   ( j 1) 
j 2 2
we have:

 n(n  1)  n( n  1) n(n  1)
T (n )  c1n  c2 (n  1)  c4 (n  1)  c5   1  c6  c7  c8 (n  1)
 2  2 2

 an 2  bn  c a quadratic function of n

• T(n) = (n2) order of growth in n2


T (n)  c1n  c2 (n  1)  c4 (n  1)  c5  t j  c6  t j  1  c7  t j  1  c8 (n  1)
n n n

j 2 j 2 j 2 21
Comparisons and Exchanges in
Insertion Sort
INSERTION-SORT(A) cost times
for j ← 2 to n c1 n
do key ← A[ j ] c2 n-1
Insert A[ j ] into the sorted sequence A[1 . . j -1] 0 n-1
i←j-1  n2/2 comparisons c4 n-1
c5 
n
while i > 0 and A[i] > key j 2 j
t

c6 
n
do A[i + 1] ← A[i] j 2
(t j  1)

 n2/2 exchanges c7 
n
i←i–1 j 2
(t j  1)

A[i + 1] ← key c8 n-1


22
Insertion Sort - Summary
• Advantages
– Good running time for “almost sorted” arrays (n)
• Disadvantages
– (n2) running time in worst and average case
–  n2/2 comparisons and exchanges

23
Bubble Sort (Ex. 2-2, page 38)
• Idea:
– Repeatedly pass through the array
– Swaps adjacent elements that are out of order

i
1 2 3 n

8 4 6 9 2 3 1
j

• Easier to implement, but slower than Insertion


sort

24
Example
8 4 6 9 2 3 1 1 8 4 6 9 2 3
i=1 j i=2 j

8 4 6 9 2 1 3 1 2 8 4 6 9 3
i=1 j i=3 j

8 4 6 9 1 2 3 1 2 3 8 4 6 9
i=1 j i=4 j

8 4 6 1 9 2 3 1 2 3 4 8 6 9
i=1 j i=5 j

8 4 1 6 9 2 3 1 2 3 4 6 8 9
i=1 j i=6 j

8 1 4 6 9 2 3 1 2 3 4 6 8 9
i=1 j i=7
j
1 8 4 6 9 2 3
25
i=1 j
Bubble Sort
Alg.: BUBBLESORT(A)
for i  1 to length[A]
do for j  length[A] downto i + 1
do if A[j] < A[j -1]
then exchange A[j]  A[j-1]
i
8 4 6 9 2 3 1
i=1 j

26
Bubble-Sort Running Time
Alg.: BUBBLESORT(A)
for i  1 to length[A] c1
do for j  length[A] downto i + 1 c2
Comparisons:  n2/2 do if A[j] < A[j -1] c3
Exchanges:  n2/2
then exchange A[j]  A[j-1] c4
n

 (n  i )
n n
T(n) = c1(n+1) + c2  (n  i  1)  c3  (n  i )  c4
i 1 i 1 i 1
n

= (n) + (c2 + c2 + c4)  (n  i )


i 1
n n n
n( n  1) n 2
n
where  (n  i)  n   i  n 
2
 
i 1 i 1 i 1 2 2 2
Thus,T(n) = (n2)
27
Selection Sort (Ex. 2.2-2, page 27)
• Idea:
– Find the smallest element in the array
– Exchange it with the element in the first position
– Find the second smallest element and exchange it with
the element in the second position
– Continue until the array is sorted
• Disadvantage:
– Running time depends only slightly on the amount of
order in the file

28
Example
8 4 6 9 2 3 1 1 2 3 4 9 6 8

1 4 6 9 2 3 8 1 2 3 4 6 9 8

1 2 6 9 4 3 8 1 2 3 4 6 8 9

1 2 3 9 4 6 8 1 2 3 4 6 8 9

29
Selection Sort
Alg.: SELECTION-SORT(A)
n ← length[A] 8 4 6 9 2 3 1

for j ← 1 to n - 1
do smallest ← j
for i ← j + 1 to n
do if A[i] < A[smallest]
then smallest ← i
exchange A[j] ↔ A[smallest]

30
Analysis of Selection Sort
Alg.: SELECTION-SORT(A) cost times
n ← length[A] c1 1
for j ← 1 to n - 1 c2 n
do smallest ← j c3 n-1
n2/2 for i ← j + 1 to n c4 nj11 (n  j  1)
comparisons
do if A[i] < A[smallest] c5 
n 1
j 1
(n  j )
n
exchanges then smallest ← i c6 
n 1
j 1
(n  j )

exchange A[j] ↔ A[smallest] c7 n-1


n 1 n 1 n 1
T (n)  c1  c2 n  c3 (n  1)  c4  (n  j  1)  c5   n  j   c6   n  j   c7 (n  1)  (n 2 ) 31
j 1 j 1 j 2

You might also like