Problem Size

In the fields of algorithm analysis and computational complexity theory, the running time or space requirements of an algorithm are expressed as a function of the problem size. The problem size measures the size, in some sense, of the input to the algorithm. The problem size has to be cleanly defined before an algorithm analysis can be attempted. For many problems, the problem size is taken to be the number of bits required to encode the input. For instance, if the problem is to square a given integer, we would typically measure the input size as the logarithm of the input integer (since that describes how many bits are needed to encode the integer in binary notation). However, often the encoding of the input is not canonical; if for instance the problem is one in graph theory, then different problem sizes can be defined, since a graph can be encoded as a list of edges or alternatively as an adjacency matrix.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
8 cell stage
cleavage
demethylation
gene knockout
sophie germain prime
curve
greedy algorithm
upskirt
sweetcorn
agama
boeing 777
jean claude van damme
gravis gamepad
tang soo do
hired guns
dodge city (1939 movie)
sprints
reginald barclay
middle distance track event
sashiko quilting
long distance track event
spectre
chteau de brissac
yes, minister
robert forward
stained glass window patchwork
lace making
the likely lads
whatever happened to the likely lads?
american museum
battle of cynoscephalae
nordfriesland
north frisian islands
piano quintet
cooperative
wiping (magnetic tape)
co op
antigonus i monophthalmus
rug making
perseus of macedon
michael curtiz
banner
elsa beskow
carl oscar borg