Simpler Optimal Sorting from a Directed Acyclic Graph

July 31, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› SIAM Symposium on Simplicity in Algorithms

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Authors Ivor van der Hoog, Eva Rotenberg, Daniel Rutschmann arXiv ID 2407.21591 Category cs.DS: Data Structures & Algorithms Citations 9 Venue SIAM Symposium on Simplicity in Algorithms Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Fredman proposed in 1976 the following algorithmic problem: Given are a ground set $X$, some partial order $P$ over $X$, and some comparison oracle $O_L$ that specifies a linear order $L$ over $X$ that extends $P$. A query to $O_L$ has as input distinct $x, x' \in X$ and outputs whether $x <_L x'$ or vice versa. If we denote by $e(P)$ the number of linear extensions of $P$, then $\log e(P)$ is a worst-case lower bound on the number of queries needed to output the sorted order of $X$. Fredman did not specify in what form the partial order is given. Haeupler, HladΓ­k, Iacono, Rozhon, Tarjan, and TΔ›tek ('24) propose to assume as input a directed acyclic graph, $G$, with $m$ edges and $n=|X|$ vertices. Denote by $P_G$ the partial order induced by $G$. Algorithmic performance is measured in running time and the number of queries used, where they use $Θ(m + n + \log e(P_G))$ time and $Θ(\log e(P_G))$ queries to output $X$ in its sorted order. Their algorithm is worst-case optimal in terms of running time and queries, both. Their algorithm combines topological sorting with heapsort. Their analysis relies upon sophisticated counting arguments using entropy, recursively defined sets defined over the run of their algorithm, and vertices in the graph that they identify as bottlenecks for sorting. In this paper, we do away with sophistication. We show that when the input is a directed acyclic graph then the problem admits a simple solution using $Θ(m + n + \log e(P_G))$ time and $Θ(\log e(P_G))$ queries. Especially our proofs are much simpler as we avoid the usage of advanced charging arguments and data structures, and instead rely upon two brief observations.
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