I understand that the innermost for loop is Θ(logn)
and the two outermost for loops is Θ(n^2) because it's an arithmetic sum. The if-statement is my main problem. Does anyone know how to solve this?
int tally=0;
for (int i = 1; i < n; i ++)
{
for (int j = i; j < n; j ++)
{
if (j % i == 0)
{
for (int k = 1; k < n; k *= 2)
{
tally++;
}
}
}
}
Edit:
Now I noticed loop order: i before j.
In this case for given i value j varies from i to n and there are (n/i) successful if-conditions.
So program will call then most inner loop
n/1 +n/2+n/3+..+n/n
times. This is sum of harmonic series, it converges to n*ln(n)
So inner loop will be executed n*log^2(n) times.
As you wrote, two outermost loops provide O(n^2) complexity, so overall complexity is O(n^2 + n*log^2(n)), the first term overrides the second one, loop, and finally overall complexity is quadratic.
int tally=0;
for (int i = 1; i < n; i ++)
{
// N TIMES
for (int j = i; j < n; j ++)
{
//N*N/2 TIMES
if (j % i == 0)
{
//NlogN TIMES
for (int k = 1; k < n; k *= 2)
{
//N*logN*logN
tally++;
}
}
}
}
Old answer (wrong)
This complexity is linked with sum of sigma0(n) function (number of divisors) and represented as sequence A006218 (Dirichlet Divisor problem)
We can see that approximation for sum of divisors for values up to n is
n * ( log(n) + 2*gamma - 1 ) + O(sqrt(n))
so average number of successful if-conditions for loop counter j is ~log(j)
Related
int sum = 0;
for(int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
for(int j = 1; j < i * i; j++) {
if(j % i == 0) {
for(int k = 0; k < j; k++) {
sum++;
}
}
}
}
I don't understand how when j = i, 2i, 3i... the last for loop runs n times. I guess I just don't understand how we came to that conclusion based on the if statement.
Edit: I know how to compute the complexity for all the loops except for why the last loop executes i times based on the mod operator... I just don't see how it's i. Basically, why can't j % i go up to i * i rather than i?
Let's label the loops A, B and C:
int sum = 0;
// loop A
for(int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
// loop B
for(int j = 1; j < i * i; j++) {
if(j % i == 0) {
// loop C
for(int k = 0; k < j; k++) {
sum++;
}
}
}
}
Loop A iterates O(n) times.
Loop B iterates O(i2) times per iteration of A. For each of these iterations:
j % i == 0 is evaluated, which takes O(1) time.
On 1/i of these iterations, loop C iterates j times, doing O(1) work per iteration. Since j is O(i2) on average, and this is only done for 1/i iterations of loop B, the average cost is O(i2 / i) = O(i).
Multiplying all of this together, we get O(n × i2 × (1 + i)) = O(n × i3). Since i is on average O(n), this is O(n4).
The tricky part of this is saying that the if condition is only true 1/i of the time:
Basically, why can't j % i go up to i * i rather than i?
In fact, j does go up to j < i * i, not just up to j < i. But the condition j % i == 0 is true if and only if j is a multiple of i.
The multiples of i within the range are i, 2*i, 3*i, ..., (i-1) * i. There are i - 1 of these, so loop C is reached i - 1 times despite loop B iterating i * i - 1 times.
The first loop consumes n iterations.
The second loop consumes n*n iterations. Imagine the case when i=n, then j=n*n.
The third loop consumes n iterations because it's executed only i times, where i is bounded to n in the worst case.
Thus, the code complexity is O(n×n×n×n).
I hope this helps you understand.
All the other answers are correct, I just want to amend the following.
I wanted to see, if the reduction of executions of the inner k-loop was sufficient to reduce the actual complexity below O(n⁴). So I wrote the following:
for (int n = 1; n < 363; ++n) {
int sum = 0;
for(int i = 1; i < n; ++i) {
for(int j = 1; j < i * i; ++j) {
if(j % i == 0) {
for(int k = 0; k < j; ++k) {
sum++;
}
}
}
}
long cubic = (long) Math.pow(n, 3);
long hypCubic = (long) Math.pow(n, 4);
double relative = (double) (sum / (double) hypCubic);
System.out.println("n = " + n + ": iterations = " + sum +
", n³ = " + cubic + ", n⁴ = " + hypCubic + ", rel = " + relative);
}
After executing this, it becomes obvious, that the complexity is in fact n⁴. The last lines of output look like this:
n = 356: iterations = 1989000035, n³ = 45118016, n⁴ = 16062013696, rel = 0.12383254507467704
n = 357: iterations = 2011495675, n³ = 45499293, n⁴ = 16243247601, rel = 0.12383580700180696
n = 358: iterations = 2034181597, n³ = 45882712, n⁴ = 16426010896, rel = 0.12383905075183874
n = 359: iterations = 2057058871, n³ = 46268279, n⁴ = 16610312161, rel = 0.12384227647628734
n = 360: iterations = 2080128570, n³ = 46656000, n⁴ = 16796160000, rel = 0.12384548432498857
n = 361: iterations = 2103391770, n³ = 47045881, n⁴ = 16983563041, rel = 0.12384867444612208
n = 362: iterations = 2126849550, n³ = 47437928, n⁴ = 17172529936, rel = 0.1238518469862343
What this shows is, that the actual relative difference between actual n⁴ and the complexity of this code segment is a factor asymptotic towards a value around 0.124... (actually 0.125). While it does not give us the exact value, we can deduce, the following:
Time complexity is n⁴/8 ~ f(n) where f is your function/method.
The wikipedia-page on Big O notation states in the tables of 'Family of Bachmann–Landau notations' that the ~ defines the limit of the two operand sides is equal. Or:
f is equal to g asymptotically
(I chose 363 as excluded upper bound, because n = 362 is the last value for which we get a sensible result. After that, we exceed the long-space and the relative value becomes negative.)
User kaya3 figured out the following:
The asymptotic constant is exactly 1/8 = 0.125, by the way; here's the exact formula via Wolfram Alpha.
Remove if and modulo without changing the complexity
Here's the original method:
public static long f(int n) {
int sum = 0;
for (int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
for (int j = 1; j < i * i; j++) {
if (j % i == 0) {
for (int k = 0; k < j; k++) {
sum++;
}
}
}
}
return sum;
}
If you're confused by the if and modulo, you can just refactor them away, with j jumping directly from i to 2*i to 3*i ... :
public static long f2(int n) {
int sum = 0;
for (int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
for (int j = i; j < i * i; j = j + i) {
for (int k = 0; k < j; k++) {
sum++;
}
}
}
return sum;
}
To make it even easier to calculate the complexity, you can introduce an intermediary j2 variable, so that every loop variable is incremented by 1 at each iteration:
public static long f3(int n) {
int sum = 0;
for (int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
for (int j2 = 1; j2 < i; j2++) {
int j = j2 * i;
for (int k = 0; k < j; k++) {
sum++;
}
}
}
return sum;
}
You can use debugging or old-school System.out.println in order to check that i, j, k triplet is always the same in each method.
Closed form expression
As mentioned by others, you can use the fact that the sum of the first n integers is equal to n * (n+1) / 2 (see triangular numbers). If you use this simplification for every loop, you get :
public static long f4(int n) {
return (n - 1) * n * (n - 2) * (3 * n - 1) / 24;
}
It is obviously not the same complexity as the original code but it does return the same values.
If you google the first terms, you can notice that 0 0 0 2 11 35 85 175 322 546 870 1320 1925 2717 3731 appear in "Stirling numbers of the first kind: s(n+2, n).", with two 0s added at the beginning. It means that sum is the Stirling number of the first kind s(n, n-2).
Let's have a look at the first two loops.
The first one is simple, it's looping from 1 to n. The second one is more interesting. It goes from 1 to i squared. Let's see some examples:
e.g. n = 4
i = 1
j loops from 1 to 1^2
i = 2
j loops from 1 to 2^2
i = 3
j loops from 1 to 3^2
In total, the i and j loops combined have 1^2 + 2^2 + 3^2.
There is a formula for the sum of first n squares, n * (n+1) * (2n + 1) / 6, which is roughly O(n^3).
You have one last k loop which loops from 0 to j if and only if j % i == 0. Since j goes from 1 to i^2, j % i == 0 is true for i times. Since the i loop iterates over n, you have one extra O(n).
So you have O(n^3) from i and j loops and another O(n) from k loop for a grand total of O(n^4)
I want to find the time complexity for this below code. Here's my understanding-
The outer for loop will loop 2n times and in the worst case when i==n, we will enter the if block where the nested for loops have complexity of O(n^2), counting the outer for loop, the time complexity for the code block will be O(n^3).
In best case when i!=n, else has complexity of O(n) and the outer for loop is O(n) which makes the complexity, in best case as O(n^2).
Am I correct or am I missing something here?
for (int i = 0; i < 2*n; i++)
{
if (i == n)
{
for (int j = 0; j < i; j++)
for (int k = 0; k < i; k++)
O(1)
}
else
{
for (int j = 0; j < i; j++)
O(1)
}
}
No.
The question "what is T(n)?".
What you are saying is "if i=n, then O(n^3), else O(n^2)".
But there is no i in the question, only n.
Think of a similar question:
"During a week, Pete works 10 hours on Wednesday, and 1 hour on every other day, what is the total time Pete works in a week?".
You don't really answer "if the week is Wednesday, then X, otherwise Y".
Your answer has to include the work time on Wednesday and on every other day as well.
Back in your original question, Wednesday is the case when i=n, and all other days are the case when i!=n.
We have to sum them all up to find the answer.
This is a question of how many times O(1) is executed per loop. The time complexity is a function of n, not i. That is, "How many times is O(1) executed at n?"
There is one run of a O(n^2) loop when i == n.
There are (2n - 2) instances of the O(n) loop in all other cases.
Therefore, the time complexity is O((2n - 2) * n + 1 * n^2) = O(3n^2 - 2*n) = O(n^2).
I've written a C program to spit out the first few values of n^2, the actual value, and n^3 to illustrate the difference:
#include <stdio.h>
int count(int n){
int ctr = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < 2*n; i++){
if (i == n)
for (int j = 0; j < i; j++)
for (int k = 0; k < i; k++)
ctr++;
else
for (int j = 0; j < i; j++)
ctr++;
}
return ctr;
}
int main(){
for (int i = 1; i <= 20; i++){
printf(
"%d\t%d\t%d\t%d\n",
i*i, count(i), 3*i*i - 2*i, i*i*i
);
}
}
Try it online!
(You can paste it into Excel to plot the values.)
The First loop is repeated 2*n times:
for (int i = 0; i < 2*n; i++)
{
// some code
}
This part Just occur once, when i == n and time complexity is : O(n^2):
if (i == n)
{
for (int j = 0; j < i; j++)
for (int k = 0; k < i; k++)
O(1)
}
And this part is depends on i.
else
{
for (int j = 0; j < i; j++)
O(1)
}
Consider i when:
i = 0 the loop is repeated 0 times
i = 1 the loop is repeated 1 times
i = 2 the loop is repeated 2 times
.
.
i = n the loop is repeated n times. (n here is 2*n)
So the loop repeated (n*(n+1)) / 2 times But when i == n else part is not working so (n*(n+1)) / 2 - n and time complexity is O(n^2).
Now we sum all of these parts: O(n^2) (first part) + O(n^2) (second part) because the first part occurs once so it's not O(n^3). Time complaxity is: O(n^2).
Based on #Gassa answer lets sum up all:
O(n^3) + O((2n)^2) = O(n^3) + O(4n^2) = O(n^3) + 4*O(n^2) = O(n^3)
Big O notation allows us throw out 4*O(n^2) because O(n^3) "eats" it
I have some trouble finding the time complexity of the code below. I figured that the if statement will run for approximately n times; however, I could not manage to describe it mathematically. Thanks in advance.
int sum = 0;
for (int i = 1; i < n; i++) {
for (int j = 1 ; j < i*i; j++) {
if (j % i == 0) {
for (int k = 0; k < j; k++) {
sum++;
}
}
}
}
Outer loop
Well, it's clear that it's O(n) because i is bounded by n.
Inner loops
If we take a look at the second loop alone, then it looks as follows:
...
for (int j = 1 ; j < i*i; j++){
...
j is bounded by i*i or simply n^2.
However, the innermost loop won't be executed for every j, but only for js that are divisible by i because that's what the constraint j % i == 0 means. Since j ~ i*i, there will be only i cases, when the innermost loop is executed. So, the number of iterations in the inner loops is bounded by i^3 or simply n^3.
Result
Hence, the overall time complexity is O(n4).
I have seen that in some cases the complexity of nested loops is O(n^2), but I was wondering in which cases we can have the following complexities of nested loops:
O(n)
O(log n) I have seen somewhere a case like this, but I do not recall the exact example.
I mean is there any kind of formulae or trick to calculate the complexity of nested loops? Sometimes when I apply summation formulas I do not get the right answer.
Some examples would be great, thanks.
Here is an example for you where the time complexity is O(n), but you have a double loop:
int cnt = 0;
for (int i = N; i > 0; i /= 2) {
for (int j = 0; j < i; j++) {
cnt += 1;
}
}
You can prove the complexity in the following way:
The first iteration, the j loop runs N times. The second iteration, the j loop runs N / 2 times. i-th iteration, the j loop runs N / 2^i times.
So in total: N * ( 1 + 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8 + … ) < 2 * N = O(N)
It would be tempting to say that something like this runs in O(log(n)):
int cnt = 0;
for (int i = 1; i < N; i *= 2) {
for (int j = 1; j < i; j*= 2) {
cnt += 1;
}
}
But I believe that this runs in O(log^2(N)) which is polylogarithmic
I've got to analyze this loop, among others, and determine its running time using Big-O notation.
for ( int i = 0; i < n; i += 4 )
for ( int j = 0; j < n; j++ )
for ( int k = 1; k < j*j; k *= 2 )`
Here's what I have so far:
for ( int i = 0; i < n; i += 4 ) = n
for ( int j = 0; j < n; j++ ) = n
for ( int k = 1; k < j*j; k *= 2 ) = log^2 n
Now the problem I'm coming to is the final running time of the loop. My best guess is O(n^2), however I am uncertain if this correct. Can anyone help?
Edit: sorry about the Oh -> O thing. My textbook uses "Big-Oh"
First note that the outer loop is independent from the remaining two - it simply adds a (n/4)* multiplier. We will consider that later.
Now let's consider the complexity of
for ( int j = 0; j < n; j++ )
for ( int k = 1; k < j*j; k *= 2 )
We have the following sum:
0 + log2(1) + log2(2 * 2) + ... + log2(n*n)
It is good to note that log2(n^2) = 2 * log2(n). Thus we re-factor the sum to:
2 * (0 + log2(1) + log2(2) + ... + log2(n))
It is not very easy to analyze this sum but take a look at this post. Using Sterling's approximation one can that it is belongs to O(n*log(n)). Thus the overall complexity is O((n/4)*2*n*log(n))= O(n^2*log(n))
In terms of j, the inner loop is O(log_2(j^2)) time, but sine
log_2(j^2)=2log(j), it is actually O(log(j)).
For each iteration of middle loop, it takes O(log(j)) time (to do the
inner loop), so we need to sum:
sum { log(j) | j=1,..., n-1 } log(1) + log(2) + ... + log(n-1) = log((n-1)!)
And since log((n-1)!) is in O((n-1)log(n-1)) = O(nlogn), we can conclude middle middle loop takes O(nlogn) operations .
Note that both middle and inner loop are independent of i, so to
get the total complexity, we can just multiply n/4 (number of
repeats of outer loop) with complexity of middle loop, and get:
O(n/4 * nlogn) = O(n^2logn)
So, total complexity of this code is O(n^2 * log(n))
Time Complexity of a loop is considered as O(n) if the loop variables is incremented / decremented by a constant amount (which is c in examples below):
for (int i = 1; i <= n; i += c) {
// some O(1) expressions
}
for (int i = n; i > 0; i -= c) {
// some O(1) expressions
}
Time complexity of nested loops is equal to the number of times the innermost statement is executed. For example the following sample loops have O(n²) time complexity:
for (int i = 1; i <=n; i += c) {
for (int j = 1; j <=n; j += c) {
// some O(1) expressions
}
}
for (int i = n; i > 0; i += c) {
for (int j = i+1; j <=n; j += c) {
// some O(1) expressions
}
Time Complexity of a loop is considered as O(logn) if the loop variables is divided / multiplied by a constant amount:
for (int i = 1; i <=n; i *= c) {
// some O(1) expressions
}
for (int i = n; i > 0; i /= c) {
// some O(1) expressions
}
Now we have:
for ( int i = 0; i < n; i += 4 ) <----- runs n times
for ( int j = 0; j < n; j++ ) <----- for every i again runs n times
for ( int k = 1; k < j*j; k *= 2 )` <--- now for every j it runs logarithmic times.
So complexity is O(n²logm) where m is n² which can be simplified to O(n²logn) because n²logm = n²logn² = n² * 2logn ~ n²logn.