Insert efficiently elements into sorted array
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Manuel Barrio
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Comentada: Haneesha Kommalapati
el 31 de En. de 2021
I want to insert elements into a sorted array -one per column- so that the result is also sorted. The following example is very simple but the matrices I am working with are quite big and hence my question is how to do it efficiently rather that how to do it.
A=[1 3 5 7; 2 3 6 7; 3 5 8 9]'
v=[6 1 6] --elements to be inserted
so that the result should be
B=[1 3 5 6 7; 1 2 3 6 7; 3 5 6 8 9]'
My first option was
B=sort([A; v])
but this takes very long with big matrices. Any optimization on this?
1 comentario
Respuesta aceptada
James Tursa
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Editada: James Tursa
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Here is a mex routine to do the operation in case you are interested. It runs in about 1/2 the time of the m-code on my machine. (Sorry Jan ... I couldn't resist!)
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------
File: sorted_insert.c
sorted_insert inserts vector elements into a sorted matrix by columns
to result in a sorted matrix by columns. Syntax:
C = sorted_insert(A,B)
A = full real double 2D matrix that is sorted by columns (MxN)
B = full real double 1D vector that has same number of elements
as A has columns (1xN) or (Nx1)
C = Matrix A with B elements inserted in sorted fashion. I.e., if B is
a row vector then this is the equivalent of C = sort([A;B],1)
Programmer: James Tursa
Date: March 8, 2018
*/
/* Includes ----------------------------------------------------------- */
#include "mex.h"
/* Prototype in case this is earlier than R2015a */
mxArray *mxCreateUninitNumericMatrix(size_t m, size_t n,
mxClassID classid, mxComplexity ComplexFlag);
/* Gateway ------------------------------------------------------------ */
void mexFunction(int nlhs, mxArray *plhs[], int nrhs, const mxArray *prhs[])
{
mwSize i, i1, i2, i3, j, m, n;
double *Apr, *Bpr, *Cpr;
if( nlhs > 1 ) {
mexErrMsgTxt("Too many outputs");
}
if( nrhs != 2 || !mxIsDouble(prhs[0]) || !mxIsDouble(prhs[1]) ||
mxIsComplex(prhs[0]) || mxIsSparse(prhs[0]) ||
mxIsComplex(prhs[1]) || mxIsSparse(prhs[1]) ) {
mexErrMsgTxt("Need two full real double inputs");
}
if( mxGetNumberOfDimensions(prhs[0]) != 2 ) {
mexErrMsgTxt("First input must be a 2D matrix");
}
m = mxGetM(prhs[0]);
n = mxGetN(prhs[0]);
if( (mxGetM(prhs[1]) != 1 && mxGetN(prhs[1]) != 1) ||
mxGetNumberOfElements(prhs[1]) != n ) {
mexErrMsgTxt("Second input must be vector with same number of elements as columns of first input");
}
plhs[0] = mxCreateUninitNumericMatrix(m+1,n,mxDOUBLE_CLASS,mxREAL);
Apr = mxGetPr(prhs[0]);
Bpr = mxGetPr(prhs[1]);
Cpr = mxGetPr(plhs[0]);
for( j=0; j<n; j++ ) { /* For each column */
i1 = 0;
i3 = m;
while( i3-i1 > 1 ) { /* Binary search to find insert spot */
i2 = (i3 + i1) >> 1;
if( Apr[i2] > *Bpr ) {
i3 = i2;
} else {
i1 = i2;
}
}
if( i1 < m && Apr[i1] > *Bpr ) { /* Potential 1st spot adjustment */
i3--;
}
for( i=0; i<i3; i++ ) { /* Copy the stuff before */
*Cpr++ = *Apr++;
}
*Cpr++ = *Bpr++; /* Copy the vector element */
for( i=i3; i<m; i++ ) { /* Copy the stuff after */
*Cpr++ = *Apr++;
}
}
}
11 comentarios
Haneesha Kommalapati
el 31 de En. de 2021
hey hi need answer for modify INSERTION_SORT.m in mtalab to sort an input array A using binary search instead of linear search and compare the time complexities of both insertion sort Algorithms. please help these...
Más respuestas (3)
Jan
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Editada: Jan
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Actually a binary search in the subvectors is optimal. But in my experiments find was not slower even if the binary search was performed in a C-mex function.
A = [1 3 5 7; 2 3 6 7; 3 5 8 9]';
v = [6 1 6];
sA = size(A);
B = zeros(sA(1) + 1, sA(2));
for k = 1:sA(2)
index = find(A(:, k) > v(k), 1);
if isempty(index)
B(1:sA, k) = A(:, k);
B(sA+1, k) = v(k);
else
B(1:index - 1, k) = A(1:index - 1, k);
B(index, k) = v(k);
B(index + 1:sA+1, k) = A(index:sA, k);
end
end
Maybe FEX: insertrows solves the problem efficiently, but it works along the rows. Working along columns is faster.
Please post some timings with relevant input data.
3 comentarios
Jan
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Editada: Jan
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Do you need it faster? Then I could try a C-mex function. But actually I do not see a bottleneck caused by Matlab here, except that find(A(:,k)>a(w,k),1) might create a copy of A(:, k) without need.
The time for sorting grows super-linear with the size of the data, but find has a linear complexity only. Therefore the advantage of find might be growing with the data size. Is 1e5 x 1e2 a typical size?
Manuel Barrio
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Editada: Manuel Barrio
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
2 comentarios
Jan
el 8 de Mzo. de 2018
Try to replace
A(index:sA1+1,k)=[a(w,k); A(index:sA1,k)];
by
A(index+1:sA1+1,k) = A(index:sA1,k);
A(index) = a(w,k);
With the first [a(w,k); A(index:sA1,k)] must be created explicitly, while it could be possible, that shifting the values in the 2nd method is done inplace.
Bruno Luong
el 12 de Mzo. de 2018
The best way to insert/delete into a sorted array is ... not using array at all, but a more sophisticated data structure, e.g. red-black tree.
Unfortunately MATLAB does not provide any efficient support for list/tree. One need to use C/C++ for efficient implementation.
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