July 1998
Intermediate to advanced
752 pages
22h 23m
English
MANY APPLICATIONS require that we process records with keys in order, but not necessarily in full sorted order and not necessarily all at once. Often, we collect a set of records, then process the one with the largest key, then perhaps collect more records, then process the one with the current largest key, and so forth. An appropriate data structure in such an environment supports the operations of inserting a new element and deleting the largest element. Such a data structure is called a priority queue. Using priority queues is similar to using queues (remove the oldest) and stacks (remove the newest), but implementing them efficiently is more challenging. The priority queue is the most important example ...
Read now
Unlock full access