Difference between revisions of "data structures"
From Noah.org
Jump to navigationJump to searchm (e) |
m (→Trees) |
||
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
;Treap (tree + heap): randomized binary tree: | ;Treap (tree + heap): randomized binary tree: | ||
;Tree Map (Tree Dict): | ;Tree Map (Tree Dict): | ||
+ | ;Skip List: allows fast probabilistic searching through an ordered sequence. | ||
+ | ;Skip Graph: based on Skip Lists, provides all features of a balanced tree with the ability to tolerate loss of nodes. |
Revision as of 13:14, 10 August 2015
Lowest Common Ancestor
Data Structures
- Linked List
- Stack
- Queue
- Heap
- Priority Queue
- Union Find
- Hash Table
- Associative array (dictionary, map, symbol table)
- A collection that associates a unique Key with a Value.
- Suffix Array
- Dynamic Suffix Array
- Sparse Table
- Lowest Common Ancestor
- Suffix Automaton
- Heavy-Light Decomposition
- Aho-Corasick
- string searching algorithm
- Rope
- data structure that uses a tree to store a string in order to make subsequent manipulation of the string more efficient. This data structure is frequently found in text editors and makes it possible to efficiently delete and insert blocks of text.
- Dancing Links
- Used to solve exact cover problems.
Trees
- Binary Search Tree
- Huffman Tree
- Segment Tree
- Binary Indexed Tree
- Range Tree
- Trie (prefix tree)
- Radix Tree
- K-d Tree
- Link-Cut Tree
- Splay Tree
- Palindromic Tree
- Treap (tree + heap)
- randomized binary tree:
- Tree Map (Tree Dict)
- Skip List
- allows fast probabilistic searching through an ordered sequence.
- Skip Graph
- based on Skip Lists, provides all features of a balanced tree with the ability to tolerate loss of nodes.