Interview Questions: Union-Find
Question 1
Social network connectivity. Given a social network containing
N
members and a log file containing
M
timestamps at which times pairs of members formed friendships, design an algorithm to determine the earliest time at which all members are connected (i.e., every member is a friend of a friend of a friend ... of a friend). Assume that the log file is sorted by timestamp and that friendship is an equivalence relation. The running time of your algorithm should be
MlogN
or better and use extra space proportional to
N
.
hint-
union-find.
use another array to keep track of the number of each subtree for each node.
Then, use binary search (lgN) to search N for each time-stamp and union pair (M).
Question 2
Union-find with specific canonical element. Add a method
find() to the union-find data type so that
find(i) returns the largest element in the connected component containing
i. The operations,
union(),
connected(), and
find() should all take logarithmic time or better.
Hint
: maintain an extra array to the weighted quick-union data structure that stores for each root
i
the large element in the connected component containing
i
.
For example, if one of the connected components is
{1,2,6,9}
, then the find() method should return
9
for each of the four elements in the connected components.
Question 3
Successor with delete. Given a set of
N
integers
S={0,1,...,N−1}
and a sequence of requests of the following form:
Hint
: use the modification of the union-find data discussed in the previous question.
- Remove
x
from
S
- Find the successor of x : the smallest y in S such that y≥x .
Question 4
Union-by-size. Develop a union-find implementation that uses the same basic strategy as weighted quick-union but keeps track of tree height and always links the shorter tree to the taller one. Prove a
lgN
upper bound on the height of the trees for
N
sites with your algorithm.
Hint
: replace the
sz[]
array with a
ht[]
array such that
ht[i]
stores the height of the subtree rooted at
i
.
Interview Questions: Analysis of Algorithms
Question 1
3-SUM in quadratic time. Design an algorithm for the 3-SUM problem that takes time proportional to
N2
in the worst case. You may assume that you can sort the
N
integers in time proportional to
N2
or better.
Question 2
Search in a bitonic array. An array is
bitonic if it is comprised of an increasing sequence of integers followed immediately by a decreasing sequence of integers. Write a program that, given a bitonic array of
N
distinct integer values, determines whether a given integer is in the array. Your program should use
∼3lgN
compares in the worst case.
Question 3
Egg drop. Suppose that you have an
N
-story building and plenty of eggs. An egg breaks if it is dropped from floor
T
or higher and does not break otherwise. Your goal is to devise a strategy to determine the value of
T
given the following limitations on the number of eggs and tosses:
- Version 0: 1 egg,
≤T
tosses.
- Version 1:
∼1lgN
eggs and
∼1lgN
tosses.
- Version 2:
∼lgT
eggs and
∼2lgT
tosses.
- Version 3:
2
eggs and
∼2N−−√
tosses.
- Version 4: 2 eggs and ≤cT−−√ tosses for some fixed constant c .