dynamic programming part one

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Dynamic Programming Part One HKOI Training Team 2004

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Dynamic Programming Part One. HKOI Training Team 2004. Recurrences. Function defined in terms of itself M(X) = X * M(X-1) F n+2 = F n+1 + F n K n+1 = max{K n-1 +100, K n } One or more base cases are needed M(0) = 1 F 0 = 1, F 1 = 1 K 10 = 100, K 11 = 177. Evaluating recurrences. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Dynamic Programming Part One

Dynamic Programming

Part One

Dynamic Programming

Part One

HKOI Training Team 2004

Page 2: Dynamic Programming Part One

2

Recurrences

• Function defined in terms of itself– M(X) = X * M(X-1)

– Fn+2 = Fn+1 + Fn

– Kn+1 = max{Kn-1+100, Kn}

• One or more base cases are needed– M(0) = 1

– F0 = 1, F1 = 1

– K10 = 100, K11 = 177

Page 3: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Evaluating recurrences

• Combination– C(n, r) = C(n-1, r) + C(n-1, r-1)– C(n, 0) = C(n, n) = 1

• Algorithm:function C(n, r)

if (r=0) or (r=n)return 1

elsereturn C(n-1, r) + C(n-1, r-1)

Page 4: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Slow...

C(4, 2)

C(3, 2) C(3, 1)

C(2, 2) C(2, 1) C(2, 0)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(5, 2)

C(4, 1)

C(3, 1) C(3, 0)

C(2, 0)C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

Page 5: Dynamic Programming Part One

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A table...

C(5, 2)

C(4, 2) C(4, 1)

C(3, 2) C(3, 1) C(3, 0)

C(2, 2) C(2, 1) C(2, 0)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

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Redundant calculations

C(4, 2)

C(3, 2) C(3, 1)

C(2, 2) C(2, 1) C(2, 0)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(5, 2)

C(4, 1)

C(3, 1) C(3, 0)

C(2, 0)C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(3, 1)

C(2, 0)C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

Page 7: Dynamic Programming Part One

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C(3, 1)

C(2, 0)C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(2, 1)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

Fast...

C(4, 2)

C(3, 2) C(3, 1)

C(2, 2) C(2, 1) C(2, 0)

C(1, 1) C(1, 0)

C(5, 2)

C(4, 1)

C(3, 0)

Page 8: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Dynamic programming

• Abbreviation: DP / DyP• Not particularly related to programming

– As in “Linear Programming”!

• An approach (paradigm) for solving certain kinds of problems– Not a particular algorithm

• Usually applied on recurrences

Page 9: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Principles of DP

• Evaluating recurrences may sometimes be slow (exponential time)

• Accelerate by avoiding redundant calculations!– Memorize previously calculated values

• Usually applied to problems with:– a recurrence relation– overlapping subproblems– solutions exhibiting optimal substructure

Page 10: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Why DP?

• Reduce runtime– In the previous computation of C(n, k),

how many times is the function invoked?• Slow algorithm: 2C(n,k) – 1 [exponential in n]• Fast algorithm: O(nk) [polynomial in n]

• Tradeoff – memory– In the C(n, k) problem, the memory

requirement is O(n) using pure recursion; O(nk) is required for memorization

• In fact, the O(nk) bound can be improved

Page 11: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Classification of problems

• Induction– Evaluation of a certain function is the main

concern– Examples:

• The N-th Fibonacci number• Number of different binary trees with N nodes

• Optimization– Maximization or minimization of certain

function is the objective– Examples:

• Shortest paths• Activity scheduling (maximize no. of activities)

Page 12: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Triangle (IOI ’94)

• Given a triangle with N levels like the one on the left, find a path with maximum sum from the top to the bottom

• Only the sum is required

7

6 9

8 1 4

2 4 5 3

Page 13: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Triangle (analysis)

• Exhaustion? – How many paths are there in total?

• Greedy?– It doesn’t work. Why?

• Graph problem?– Possible, but not simple enough

Page 14: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Triangle (formulation)

• Let A[i][j] denote the number in the i-th row and j-th column, (i, j)

• Let F[i][j] denote the sum of the numbers on a path with max sum from (1, 1) to (i, j)

• Answer = maximum of F[N][1], F[N][2], …, F[N][N]

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Triangle (formulation)

• Base case: F[1][1] = A[1][1]• Progress: (i > 1, 1 < j < i)

– F[i][1] = F[i-1][1]+A[i][1]– F[i][i] = F[i-1][i-1]+A[i][i]– F[i][j] = max{F[i-1][j-1],F[i-1][j]}+A[i][j]

i-1, j-1 i-1, j

i, j

Page 16: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Triangle (order of calc.)

• F[i][*] depends on F[i-1][*]• Compute F row by row, from top to

bottom

Page 17: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Triangle (algorithm)

• Algorithm:– F[1][1] A[1][1];

for i 2 to N doF[i][1] = F[i-1][1]+A[i][1];F[i][i] = F[i-1][i-1]+A[i][i];for j 2 to i-1 do

F[i][j] max{F[i][j],F[i][j-1]} + A[i][j]

answer max{F[N][1], …, F[N][N]}

Page 18: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Triangle (complexity)

• Number of array entries to be computed: about N(N-1)/2

• Time for computing one entry: O(1)• Thus the total time complexity is O(N2)• Memory complexity: O(N2)

– This can be reduced to O(N) since F[i][*] only depends on F[i-1][*]

– We can discard some previous entries after starting on a new row

Page 19: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Longest Common Subsequence

• Given two strings A and B of length n and m respectively, find their longest common subsequence (NOT substring)

• Example– A: aabcaabcaadyyyefg– B: cdfehgjaefazadxex– LCS: caaade– Explanation

• A: a a b c a a b c a a d y y y e f g• B: c d f e h g j a e f a z a d x e x

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LCS (analysis)

• Exhaustion– Number of subsequences of A = 2n

– Number of subsequences of B = 2m

– Exponential time!

• Observation– If a LCS of A and B is nonempty then it

must have a last character (trivial)

A: a a b c a a b c a a d y y y e f g

B: c d f e h g j a e f a z a d x e x

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LCS (analysis)

• Observation– Suppose the last LCS character

corresponds to A[i] and B[j]– Removing the last LCS character results in

a LCS of A[1..i-1] and B[1..j-1]

A: a a b c a a b c a a d y y y e f g

B: c d f e h g j a e f a z a d x e x

A: a a b c a a b c a a d y y y e f g

B: c d f e h g j a e f a z a d x e x

Page 22: Dynamic Programming Part One

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LCS (formulation)

• Thus it is reasonable to define F[i][j] as the length of any LCS of A[1..i] and B[1..j]

• Base cases:– F[i][0] = 0 for all i– F[0][j] = 0 for all j

• Progress: (0 < i <= n, 0 < j <= m)– F[i][j] = F[i-1][j-1] + 1 if A[i]=B[j]– F[i][j] = max{F[i-1][j], F[i][j-1]} else

Page 23: Dynamic Programming Part One

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LCS (order of calc.)

• F[i][j] depends on F[a][b], a ≤ i and b ≤ j• Order: from top to bottom, from left to right

– There are some other possible orders!

0 1 2 3 4

0

1

2

3

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LCS (complexity)

• Time complexity: O(NM)• Memory complexity: O(NM)

– Again, this can be reduced to O(N+M), but why and how?

Page 25: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Coins

• Given an unlimited supply of $2, $3 and $5 coins, find the number of different ways to form a denomination of $N

• Example:– N = 10– {2, 2, 2, 2, 2}, {2, 2, 3, 3}, {2, 3, 5},

{5, 5}

• Solve this induction problem by yourself

Page 26: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Matrix Chain Multiplication

• A matrix is a rectangle of numbers

• The number of “usual” multiplications needed to multiply a n×m matrix and a m×r matrix is nmr

• Matrix multiplication is associative– (AB)C = A(BC)

2 7 920 4 -1

A matrix of size 2×3

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Matrix Chain Multiplication

• Given a sequence of matrices A1, A2, …, An, find an order of multiplications such that the total number of “usual” multiplications is minimized

• Example:– A: 3×7, B: 7×5, C: 5×2– (AB)C takes 3×7×5+3×5×2 = 135 muls– A(BC) takes 7×5×2+3×7×2 = 112 muls

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MCM (analysis)

• How many different orders of multiplications are there?– This can be solved by DP!

• Does greedy work?• Let’s have a look at the brackets

– (A((BC)((DE)F)))(G((HI)J))– There must be one last multiplication– (A((BC)((DE)F)))(G((HI)J))– Every subexpression with more than one

matrix has one last multiplication

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MCM (analysis)

• Optimal substructure– If the last multiplication is (A1A2…Ai)(Ai+1…

AN) and the multiplication scheme is optimal, then the multiplication schemes for A1A2…Ai and Ai+1…AN must also be optimal

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MCM (formulation)

• Let r[i] and c[i] be the number of rows and the number of columns of Ai respectively

• Let F[i][j] be the minimum number of “usual” multiplications required to compute AiAi+1…Aj

• Base case: F[i][i] = 0 for all i• Progress: for all i < j

F[i][j] = min{F[i][k]+F[k+1][j]+ r[i]*c[k]*c[j]}

i ≤ k < j

Page 31: Dynamic Programming Part One

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MCM (order of calc.)

• F with fewer matrices first

j, i 1 2 3 4 5 6

1

2

3

4

5

6

first

last

Page 32: Dynamic Programming Part One

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MCM (alternative)

• Let G[i][j] be the minimum number of “usual” multiplications required to compute AiAi+1…Ai+j-1

• Base case: G[i][1] = 0 for all i• Progress: for all 1 < j < N-i

G[i][j] = min{G[i][k]+G[i+k][j-k]+ r[i]*r[i+k]*c[i+j-1]}• Explain!!

1 ≤ k < j

Page 33: Dynamic Programming Part One

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MCM (alternative)

• Still, G with fewer matrices first

i, j 1 2 3 4 5 6

1

2

3

4

5

6 first

last

Page 34: Dynamic Programming Part One

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MCM (algorithm)

• Bottom-up algorithm (algorithm 2):for i 1 to N do

G[i][1] 0for j 2 to N do

for i 1 to N-j+1 G[i][j] min{G[i][k]

+G[i+k][j-k]+ r[i]*r[i+k]*c[i+j-1]}

answer G[1][N]

1 ≤ k < j

Page 35: Dynamic Programming Part One

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MCM algorithm)

• Top-down algorithm (algorithm 1):function MCM_DP(i, j)

if F[i][j] is not ∞, return F[i][j]m ∞for k i to j-1 do

m min{m, MCM_DP(i, k)+ MCM_DP(k+1, j)+ r[i]*c[k]*c[j]}

F[i][j] mreturn F[i][j]

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MCM (algorithm)

• Top-down algorithm (main):initialize everything in F to ∞for i 1 to N do

F[i][i] 0answer MCM_DP(1, N)

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MCM (complexity)

• Number of array entries to be computed: about N(N-1)/2

• Number of references to other entries when computing one single entry:– It varies– On the average, about N/2

• Thus the total time complexity is O(N3)

Page 38: Dynamic Programming Part One

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Fishing

• There are N fish ponds and you are going to spend M minutes on fishing

• Given the time-reward relationship of each pond, determine the time you should spend at each pond in order to get the biggest reward

time/pond 1 2 3

1 minute 0 fish 2 fish 1 fish

2 minutes 3 fish 2 fish 2 fish

3 minutes 3 fish 4 fish 4 fish

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Fishing (example)

• For example, if N=3, M=3 and the relationships are given in the previous slide, then the optimal schedule is– Pond 1: 2 minutes– Pond 2: 1 minute– Pond 3: 0 minute– Reward: 5 fish

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Fishing (analysis)

• You can think of yourself visiting ponds 1, 2, 3, …, N in order– Why?

• Suppose in an optimal schedule you spend K minutes on fishing at pond 1

• So you have M-K minutes to spend at the remaining N-1 ponds– The problem is reduced

• But how can I know what is K?– You don’t know, so try all possible values!

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Fishing (formulation)

• Let F[i][j] be the maximum reward you can get by spending j minutes at the first i ponds

• Base cases: 0 ≤ i, j ≤ NF[i][0] = 0F[0][j] = 0

• Progress: 1 ≤ i ≤ N, 1 ≤ j ≤ MF[i][j] = max{F[i-1][k]+R[i][j-k]}

0 ≤ k ≤ j

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Brackets

• A balanced-bracket expression (BBE) is defined as follows– The empty string is a BBE– If X and Y are BBEs then (X) and XY BBEs– Nothing else is a BBE

• For example, (), (()), ()(()())(()) are BBEs while ((), )(, (()()))()() are not BBEs

• Find the number of different BBEs with exactly N pairs of brackets

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Brackets (analysis)

• Obviously this is an induction problem• Listing out all BBEs with N pairs of

brackets is not a good idea• What makes a bracket expression not

a BBE?– the numbers of opening and closing

brackets do not match– the number of closing brackets exceeds

the number of opening brackets at some point during a scan from left to right

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Brackets (analysis)

• Clearly only the second rule matters in this problem

• Intuitively it is easy to construct a BBE from left to right

• We call a bracket expression a BBE-prefix (BP) if the number of closing brackets never exceeds the number of opening brackets during a scan from left to right

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Brackets (formulation)

• Let F[i][j] be the number of BPs with i opening brackets and j closing brackets (thus of length i+j)

• Base cases:F[0][0] = 1F[i][j] = 0 for all 0 ≤ i < j ≤ N

• Progress: (0 < j ≤ i ≤ N)F[i][j] = F[i-1][j]+F[i][j-1]

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Polygon Triangulation

• Given an N-sided convex polygon A, find a triangulation scheme with minimum total cut length

1

2

34

5

6

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Polygon (analysis)

• Every edge of A belongs to exactly one triangle resulting from the triangulation 1

2

4

5

6

4

1

34

2• We get two (or one) smaller polygons after deleting a triangle

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Polygon (analysis)

• The order of cutting does not matter• Optimal substructure

– If the cutting scheme for A is optimal, then the cutting schemes for B and C must also be optimal

A

B

C

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Polygon (formulation)

• Take this problem as an exercise• A small hint: similar to Matrix Chain

Multiplication• Nothing more

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Summary

• Remember, DP is just a technique, not a particular algorithm

• The problems we have discussed are quite straightforward that you should be able to know they can be solved by DP with little inspection

• The DP problems in NOI and IOI are much harder– They are well disguised

• Looking at a wide variety of DP problems seems to be the only way to master DP

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Looking forward…

• Hopefully the trainer responsible for Advanced DP II will talk about DP on non-rectangular structures, such as trees and graphs

• The problems discussed will be more complicated than those you have just seen, so please be prepared

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The end

LET’S HAVE LUNCH!!!

The last thing…