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3-Heap Sort

Heapsort is a sorting algorithm that uses a heap data structure. A heap is a balanced binary tree where the value of each node is greater than or equal to the values of its children (max-heap property). To sort an array using heapsort, the array is first converted into a max-heap by pushing elements into the heap and sifting them down. Then elements are removed from the root of the heap one by one and added to the end of the sorted array. This process continues until the heap is empty, resulting in a fully sorted array.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views26 pages

3-Heap Sort

Heapsort is a sorting algorithm that uses a heap data structure. A heap is a balanced binary tree where the value of each node is greater than or equal to the values of its children (max-heap property). To sort an array using heapsort, the array is first converted into a max-heap by pushing elements into the heap and sifting them down. Then elements are removed from the root of the heap one by one and added to the end of the sorted array. This process continues until the heap is empty, resulting in a fully sorted array.

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rajnikant pubg
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Heapsort

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal


Previous sorting algorithms
◼ Insertion Sort

◼ O(n2) time

◼ Merge Sort

◼ O(n) space

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal


Heap data structure
◼ Binary tree

◼ Balanced

◼ Left-justified or Complete

◼ (Max) Heap property: no node has a value greater


than the value in its parent

3
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Balanced binary trees
◼ Recall:
◼ The depth of a node is its distance from the root
◼ The depth of a tree is the depth of the deepest node

◼ A binary tree of depth n is balanced if all the nodes at


depths 0 through n-2 have two children

n-2
n-1
n
Balanced Balanced Not balanced

4
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Left-justified binary trees
◼ A balanced binary tree of depth n is left-
justified if:
◼ it has 2n nodes at depth n (the tree is “full”), or
◼ it has 2k nodes at depth k, for all k < n, and all
the leaves at depth n are as far left as possible

Left-justified Not left-justified

5
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Building up to heap sort
◼ How to build a heap

◼ How to maintain a heap

◼ How to use a heap to sort data

6
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
The heap property
◼ A node has the heap property if the value in the
node is as large as or larger than the values in its
children
12 12 12

8 3 8 12 8 14
Blue node has Blue node has Blue node does not
heap property heap property have heap property

◼ All leaf nodes automatically have the heap property


◼ A binary tree is a heap if all nodes in it have the
heap property 7
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
◼ Given a node that does not have the heap property, you can
give it the heap property by exchanging its value with the
value of the larger child

12 14

8 14 8 12
Blue node does not Blue node has
have heap property heap property

◼ This is sometimes called sifting up

8
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Constructing a heap I
◼ A tree consisting of a single node is automatically
a heap
◼ We construct a heap by adding nodes one at a time:
◼ Add the node just to the right of the rightmost node in
the deepest level
◼ If the deepest level is full, start a new level
◼ Examples:
Add a new Add a new
node here node here

9
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Constructing a heap II
◼ Each time we add a node, we may destroy the heap
property of its parent node
◼ To fix this, we sift up
◼ But each time we sift up, the value of the topmost node
in the sift may increase, and this may destroy the heap
property of its parent node
◼ We repeat the sifting up process, moving up in the tree,
until either
◼ We reach nodes whose values don’t need to be swapped
(because the parent is still larger than both children), or
◼ We reach the root

10
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Constructing a heap III

8 8 10 10

10 8 8 5

1 2 3

10 10 12

8 5 12 5 10 5

12 8 8
4

11
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Other children are not affected

12 12 14

10 5 14 5 12 5

8 14 8 10 8 10

◼ The node containing 8 is not affected because its parent gets larger, not
smaller
◼ The node containing 5 is not affected because its parent gets larger, not
smaller
◼ The node containing 8 is still not affected because, although its parent got
smaller, its parent is still greater than it was originally

12
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
A sample heap
◼ Here’s a sample binary tree after it has been heapified

25

22 17

19 22 14 15

18 14 21 3 9 11

◼ Notice that heapified does not mean sorted


◼ Heapifying does not change the shape of the binary tree;
this binary tree is balanced and left-justified because it
started out that way
13
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Removing the root (animated)
◼ Notice that the largest number is now in the root
◼ Suppose we discard the root:
11

22 17

19 22 14 15

18 14 21 3 9 11

◼ How can we fix the binary tree so it is once again balanced


and left-justified?
◼ Solution: remove the rightmost leaf at the deepest level and
use it for the new root
14
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
The reHeap method I
◼ Our tree is balanced and left-justified, but no longer a heap
◼ However, only the root lacks the heap property
11

22 17

19 22 14 15

18 14 21 3 9

◼ We can siftDown() the root


◼ After doing this, one and only one of its children may have
lost the heap property
15
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
The reHeap method II
◼ Now the left child of the root (still the number 11) lacks
the heap property
22

11 17

19 22 14 15

18 14 21 3 9

◼ We can siftDown() this node


◼ After doing this, one and only one of its children may have
lost the heap property
16
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
The reHeap method III
◼ Now the right child of the left child of the root (still the
number 11) lacks the heap property:
22

22 17

19 11 14 15

18 14 21 3 9

◼ We can siftDown() this node


◼ After doing this, one and only one of its children may have
lost the heap property —but it doesn’t, because it’s a leaf
17
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
The reHeap method IV
◼ Our tree is once again a heap, because every node in it has
the heap property
22

22 17

19 21 14 15

18 14 11 3 9

◼ Once again, the largest (or a largest) value is in the root


◼ We can repeat this process until the tree becomes empty
◼ This produces a sequence of values in order largest to smallest
18
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Sorting
◼ What do heaps have to do with sorting an array?
◼ Here’s the neat part:
◼ Because the binary tree is balanced and left justified, it can be
represented as an array
◼ Danger Will Robinson: This representation works well only with
balanced, left-justified binary trees
◼ All our operations on binary trees can be represented as
operations on arrays
◼ To sort:
heapify the array;
while the array isn’t empty {
remove and replace the root;
reheap the new root node;
}
19
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Key properties
◼ Determining location of root and “last node” take
constant time

◼ Remove n elements, re-heap each time

20
Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal
Analysis
◼ To reheap the root node, we have to follow one path
from the root to a leaf node (and we might stop before
we reach a leaf)
◼ The binary tree is perfectly balanced
◼ Therefore, this path is O(log n) long
◼ And we only do O(1) operations at each node
◼ Therefore, reheaping takes O(log n) times
◼ Since we reheap inside a while loop that we do n times,
the total time for the while loop is n*O(log n), or
O(n log n)

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal


Analysis
◼ Construct the heap O(n log n)

◼ Remove and re-heap O(log n)


◼ Do this n times O(n log n)

◼ Total time O(n log n) + O(n log n)

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal


The End
◼ Continue to priority queues?

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal


Priority Queue
◼ Queue – only access element in front

◼ Queue elements sorted by order of importance

◼ Implement as a heap where nodes store priority values

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal


Extract Max

◼ Remove root

◼ Swap with last node

◼ Re-heapify

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal


Increase Key

◼ Change node value

◼ Re-heapify

Program Name: BCA+MCA Faculty Name: Dr. Monika Bansal

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