Easy and Efficient Dynamic Segment Trees (with Policy Hash Tables)

Revision en2, by Chilli, 2018-07-27 06:46:51

My favorite implementation of segment trees has always been "Easy and Efficient Segment Trees, by Al.Cash. You can implement standard segtree with it, you can implement lazy propagation, etc. It suffices for the vast majority of segtree problems. However, there are some types of segtree that you can't implement in that fashion, namely dynamic segtrees and persistent segtrees. See here for criticism. With the advent of policy hash tables, however, one can now implement dynamic segtrees in Al.Cash's style with comparable performance to a custom dynamic segtree.

Standard segtree

This is how a standard segtree looks like. You can set a single element, and query for ranges. It's nice and simple, and I think it's a great implementation.

int N;
int seg[2 * MAXN];

void modify(int p, int val) {
    for (seg[p += N] = val; p > 0; p >>= 1)
        seg[p >> 1] = seg[p] + seg[p ^ 1];
}

int query(int l, int r) {
    int res = 0;
    for (l += N, r += N; l < r; l >>= 1, r >>= 1) {
        if (l & 1)
            res += seg[l++];
        if (r & 1)
            res += seg[--r];
    }
    return res;
}

Dynamic Segtree

However, say your underlying array had 1e9 possible locations, but it only contained 1e5 elements. For example, take a look at this post. Obviously, you can't store all 2e9 elements in your segtree, so what should you do? Here's one solution, replace the array with a hash table. However, as adamant mentions, unordered_map has too much overhead. We'll be benchmarking against the dynamic segtree provided here. I'll also be using a custom hash function. So to be clear, the implementation now looks like:

Code

And benchmarking it with 1e5 random insertions and 1e5 random queries.

pointer: 0.171485
unordered_map: 2.0646

Wow. The unordered_map is nearly 12x slower. That's not really feasible for a lot of contests. What if we replace it with a policy hash table, though?

Code
pointer: 0.202186
policy hash table: 0.384312

Only a 2x decrease in speed. That's already very feasible. However, one might notice that since maps in C++ create elements if you try to access a key that doesn't exist, we're creating a lot of useless elements. Thus, we can simply wrap a check to make sure the element is in the array before we try to access it.

gp_hash_table<ll, ll, chash> seg;

ll get(ll x) { return (seg.find(x) == seg.end()) ? 0 : seg[x]; }
void modify(ll p, ll val) {
    for (seg[p += N] = val; p > 0; p >>= 1) {
        seg[p >> 1] = get(p) + get(p ^ 1);
    }
}

ll query(ll l, ll r) {
    ll res = 0;
    for (l += N, r += N; l < r; l >>= 1, r >>= 1) {
        if (l & 1)
            res += get(l++);
        if (r & 1)
            res += get(--r);
    }
    return res;
}

Results:

policy hash table: 0.310953
pointer: 0.208667

Only 1.5x slower!

One more thing. Although it may seem like this implementation is just 1.5x slower, that's a little bit misleading. If we break down the numbers between insertion/querying, we see this:

policy hash table insertion: 0.24153
pointer insertion: 0.048696
policy hash table queries: 0.08687
pointer queries: 0.133678

So the custom implementation is actually 50% slower than the policy hash table one for queries. Not too bad.

Tags segment tree, policy based, dynamic

History

 
 
 
 
Revisions
 
 
  Rev. Lang. By When Δ Comment
en11 English Chilli 2018-12-10 01:58:10 0 (published)
en10 English Chilli 2018-12-10 01:57:34 16 Tiny change: ' queries\n~~~~~\np' -> ' queries\n\n~~~~~\np' (saved to drafts)
en9 English Chilli 2018-12-10 01:38:15 1038
en8 English Chilli 2018-12-09 10:24:32 0 (published)
en7 English Chilli 2018-12-09 10:23:47 18 Tiny change: 'og/entry/19080), unorder' -> 'og/entry/18051?#comment-288074), unorder' (saved to drafts)
en6 English Chilli 2018-12-09 10:21:18 212 (published)
en5 English Chilli 2018-12-09 10:19:30 6
en4 English Chilli 2018-07-27 06:48:45 9 Tiny change: 'tyle with comparabl' -> 'tyle with somewhat comparabl'
en3 English Chilli 2018-07-27 06:48:10 7 Tiny change: '="Code">\n\n~~~~~\nint N;\n' -> '="Code">\n~~~~~\n\nint N;\n'
en2 English Chilli 2018-07-27 06:46:51 91 Tiny change: 'er:AlCash]'s style w' -> 'er:AlCash] 's style w'
en1 English Chilli 2018-07-26 04:18:23 4617 Initial revision (saved to drafts)