Difference between revisions of "CSC212 Lab 12 2014"
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* Java provides ''heap'' data structures, but calls them ''PriorityQueues''. | * Java provides ''heap'' data structures, but calls them ''PriorityQueues''. | ||
− | * Instead of keeping the largest element at the top of the heap, PriorityQueues keep the ''smallest'' | + | * Instead of keeping the largest element at the top of the heap, PriorityQueues keep the ''smallest'' element at the top. |
* Try the example below to see how to use a [https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/PriorityQueue.html PriorityQueue] | * Try the example below to see how to use a [https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/PriorityQueue.html PriorityQueue] | ||
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=Lab Problem #3: QuickSort = | =Lab Problem #3: QuickSort = | ||
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Revision as of 20:18, 9 November 2014
--D. Thiebaut (talk) 19:37, 9 November 2014 (EST)
Lab Problem #1: Recursion-Stack Depth
- Create a class containing the code for Quicksort.
- Run it on arrays of size 10, 200, 500, 1000, 5000, 10000, 50000, 100000. Keep on increasing the size until something happens...
- You probably ran into an exception... Make sure you read what the exception is... Can you figure it out?
- Read the documentation of the -XSS command line on this page.
- Apply it to your program
- If you are using Eclipse, click on the Run top menu-option, then Run Configurations, then on the Arguments tab, and in the VM arguments window, enter something like -Xss64m (you'll have to do go through some trials and errors to find the right value.
- * If you are running your Java code on beowulf, simply add the option on the command line:
java -Xss64m QuickSort 1000000 random
- Make sure you have define a large enough stack to sort at least a million ints.
Lab Problem #2
- Java provides heap data structures, but calls them PriorityQueues.
- Instead of keeping the largest element at the top of the heap, PriorityQueues keep the smallest element at the top.
- Try the example below to see how to use a PriorityQueue
import java.util.PriorityQueue; public class HeapPriorityQueue { public static void main(String[] args) { PriorityQueue<Integer> heap = new PriorityQueue<Integer>(); heap.add( 1 ); heap.add( 20 ); heap.add( 5 ); heap.add( 100 ); while ( ! heap.isEmpty() ) System.out.println( heap.poll() ); } }
- Question 1
- Using some of the code/functions from this page, create a function called heapsort( int[] A ) that will use a priority queue to sort the array of ints A.
- Question 2
- Using the code snippet below, measure the execution times of QuickSort and of your HeapSort function. Figure out which is regularly faster on arrays of varying sizes.
long start = System.nanoTime(); quicksort(A, 0, A.length - 1); long end = System.nanoTime(); System.out.println( String.format( "quickSort( %d ) takes %1.3f msec", N, (end-start)/1000000.0f ) );
Lab Problem #3: QuickSort
- You should have gone through Problem #1 and modified QuickSort so that you can measure its execution time.
- Run it on sorted arrays of varying sizes until you find an array size that requires about