2 Dfs
2 Dfs
2 Dfs
DFS
1
Last Class’s Topic
● Graph Representation
■ Adjacency Matrix
■ Adjacency List
● BFS – Breadth First Search
2
Breadth-First Search: The Code
Data: color[V], prev[V],d[V] While(Q not empty)
{
BFS(G) // starts from here u = DEQUEUE(Q);
{ for each v adj[u]{
if (color[v] == WHITE){
for each vertex u V-
{s} color[v] = GREY;
{ d[v] = d[u] + 1;
prev[v] = u;
color[u]=WHITE;
Enqueue(Q, v);
prev[u]=NIL;
}
d[u]=inf;
}
} color[u] = BLACK;
color[s]=GRAY; }
d[s]=0; prev[s]=NIL; }
Q=empty;
ENQUEUE(Q,s);
3
Breadth-First Search: Print Path
Data: color[V], prev[V],d[V]
Print-Path(G, s, v)
{
if(v==s)
print(s)
else if(prev[v]==NIL)
print(No path);
else{
Print-Path(G,s,prev[v]);
print(v);
}
}
4
BFS – Questions
● Find the shortest path between “A” and “B” (with path)? When
will it fail?
● Find the most distant node from start node “A”
● How can we detect that there exists no path between A and B
using BFS?
● Print all of those nodes that are at distance 2 from source vertex
“S”.
● How can we modify BFS algorithm to check the bipartiteness of
a graph?
● Is it possible to answer that there exists more than one path from
“S” to “T” with minimum path cost?
5
Depth-First Search
● Input: 1 2
■ G = (V, E) (No source vertex given!) 3
● Goal: 5 4
■ Explore the edges of G to “discover” every vertex in V starting at the most
current visited node
■ Search may be repeated from multiple sources
● Output:
■ 2 timestamps on each vertex:
○ d[v] = discovery time
○ f[v] = finishing time (done with examining v’s adjacency list)
■ Depth-first forest
Depth-First Search
B C G
13
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | | |
A
| |
E
| | |
B C G
14
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | | |
A
2 | |
E
| | |
B C G
15
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | | |
A
2 | |
E
3 | | |
B C G
16
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | | |
A
2 | |
E
3 | 4 | |
B C G
17
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | | |
A
2 | |
E
3 | 4 5 | |
B C G
18
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | | |
A
2 | |
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
19
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | | |
A
2 | 7 |
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
20
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | 8 | |
A
2 | 7 |
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
21
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | 8 | |
A
2 | 7 9 |
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
What is the structure of the grey vertices?
What do they represent?
22
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | 8 | |
A
2 | 7 9 |10
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
23
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 | 8 |11 |
A
2 | 7 9 |10
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
24
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
1 |12 8 |11 |
A
2 | 7 9 |10
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
25
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
A
2 | 7 9 |10
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 |
B C G
26
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
A
2 | 7 9 |10
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 14|
B C G
27
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
A
2 | 7 9 |10
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 14|15
B C G
28
DFS Example
source
vertex
dS f D F
A
2 | 7 9 |10
E
3 | 4 5 | 6 14|15
B C G
29
Depth-First Search: The Code
Data: color[V], time, DFS_Visit(u)
prev[V],d[V], f[V] {
DFS(G) // where prog starts color[u] = GREY;
time = time+1;
{
d[u] = time;
for each vertex u V
for each v Adj[u]
{ {
color[u] = WHITE; if (color[v] == WHITE)
prev[u]=NIL; prev[v]=u;
f[u]=inf; d[u]=inf; DFS_Visit(v);
}
}
color[u] = BLACK;
time = 0;
time = time+1;
for each vertex u V f[u] = time;
if (color[u] == WHITE) }
DFS_Visit(u);
}
What will be the running time?
30
Depth-First Search: The Code
Data: color[V], time, DFS_Visit(u)
prev[V],d[V], f[V] {
DFS(G) // where prog starts color[u] = GREY;
time = time+1;
{
d[u] = time;
for each vertex u V
for each v Adj[u]
{ { O(V)
color[u] = WHITE; if (color[v] == WHITE)
prev[u]=NIL; O(V) prev[v]=u;
f[u]=inf; d[u]=inf; DFS_Visit(v);
}
}
color[u] = BLACK;
time = 0;
time = time+1;
for each vertex u VO(V) f[u] = time;
if (color[u] == WHITE) }
DFS_Visit(u);
} Running time: O(V2) because call DFS_Visit on each vertex,
and the loop over Adj[] can
31 run as many as |V| times
Depth-First Search: The Code
Data: color[V], time, DFS_Visit(u)
prev[V],d[V], f[V] {
DFS(G) // where prog starts color[u] = GREY;
time = time+1;
{
d[u] = time;
for each vertex u V
for each v Adj[u]
{ {
color[u] = WHITE; if (color[v] == WHITE)
prev[u]=NIL; prev[v]=u;
f[u]=inf; d[u]=inf; DFS_Visit(v);
}
}
color[u] = BLACK;
time = 0;
time = time+1;
for each vertex u V f[u] = time;
if (color[u] == WHITE) }
DFS_Visit(u);
} BUT, there is actually a tighter bound.
How many times will DFS_Visit()
32
actually be called?
Depth-First Search: The Code
Data: color[V], time, DFS_Visit(u)
prev[V],d[V], f[V] {
DFS(G) // where prog starts color[u] = GREY;
time = time+1;
{
d[u] = time;
for each vertex u V
for each v Adj[u]
{ {
color[u] = WHITE; if (color[v] == WHITE)
prev[u]=NIL; prev[v]=u;
f[u]=inf; d[u]=inf; DFS_Visit(v);
}
}
color[u] = BLACK;
time = 0;
time = time+1;
for each vertex u V f[u] = time;
if (color[u] == WHITE) }
DFS_Visit(u);
}
So, running time of DFS = O(V+E)
33
Depth-First Sort Analysis
● This running time argument is an informal
example of amortized analysis
■ “Charge” the exploration of edge to the edge:
○ Each loop in DFS_Visit can be attributed to an edge in the
graph
○ Runs once per edge if directed graph, twice if undirected
○ Thus loop will run in O(E) time, algorithm O(V+E)
Considered linear for graph, b/c adj list requires O(V+E) storage
■ Important to be comfortable with this kind of reasoning
and analysis
34
DFS: Kinds of edges
● DFS introduces an important distinction
among edges in the original graph:
■ Tree edge: encounter new (white) vertex
○ The tree edges form a spanning forest
○ Can tree edges form cycles? Why or why not?
No
35
DFS Example
source
vertex
d f
1 |12 8 |11 13|16
2 | 7 9 |10
3 | 4 5 | 6 14|15
Tree edges
36
DFS: Kinds of edges
● DFS introduces an important distinction
among edges in the original graph:
■ Tree edge: encounter new (white) vertex
■ Back edge: from descendent to ancestor
○ Encounter a grey vertex (grey to grey)
○ Self loops are considered as to be back edge.
37
DFS Example
source
vertex
d f
1 |12 8 |11 13|16
2 | 7 9 |10
3 | 4 5 | 6 14|15
39
DFS Example
source
vertex
d f
1 |12 8 |11 13|16
2 | 7 9 |10
3 | 4 5 | 6 14|15
41
DFS Example
source
vertex
d f
1 |12 8 |11 13|16
2 | 7 9 |10
3 | 4 5 | 6 14|15
43
Depth-First Search - Timestamps
a b s c
3/6 2/9 1/10 11/16
B F C
B
4/5 7/8 12/13 14/15
d C e C f C g
44
Depth-First Search - Timestamps
s c
C B
F
b f g
C
a e C
B
C
d
45
Depth-First Search: Detect Edge
Data: color[V], time, DFS_Visit(u)
prev[V],d[V], f[V] {
color[u] = GREY;
DFS(G) // where prog starts
time = time+1;
{ d[u] = time;
for each vertex u V for each v Adj[u]
{ {
detect edge type using “color[v]”
color[u] = WHITE; if(color[v] == WHITE){
prev[u]=NIL; prev[v]=u;
f[u]=inf; d[u]=inf; DFS_Visit(v);
}}
}
color[u] = BLACK;
time = 0; time = time+1;
for each vertex u V f[u] = time;
if (color[u] == WHITE) }
DFS_Visit(u);
}
46
DFS: Kinds Of Edges
● Thm 22.10: If G is undirected, a DFS produces
only tree and back edges
● Proof by contradiction:
source
■ Assume there’s a forward edge F?
○ But F? edge must actually be a
back edge (why?)
47
DFS: Kinds Of Edges
● Thm 23.9: If G is undirected, a DFS produces only
tree and back edges
● Proof by contradiction:
■ Assume there’s a cross edge source
○ But C? edge cannot be cross:
○ must be explored from one of the
vertices it connects, becoming a tree
vertex, before other vertex is explored
○ So in fact the picture is wrong…both
lower tree edges cannot in fact be
tree edges
C?
48
DFS And Graph Cycles
● Thm: An undirected graph is acyclic iff a DFS yields
no back edges
■ If acyclic, no back edges (because a back edge implies a
cycle
■ If no back edges, acyclic
○ No back edges implies only tree edges (Why?)
○ Only tree edges implies we have a tree or a forest
○ Which by definition is acyclic
49
DFS And Cycles
How would you modify the code to detect cycles?
52
DFS And Cycles
● What will be the running time for undirected
graph to detect cycle?
● A: O(V+E)
● We can actually determine if cycles exist in
O(V) time:
■ In an undirected acyclic forest, |E| |V| - 1
■ So count the edges: if ever see |V| distinct edges,
must have seen a back edge along the way
53
DFS And Cycles
● What will be the running time for directed
graph to detect cycle?
● A: O(V+E)
54
Reference
● Cormen –
■ Chapter 22 (Elementary Graph Algorithms)
● Exercise –
■ 22.3-4 –Detect edge using d[u], d[v], f[u], f[v]
■ 22.3-11 – Connected Component
■ 22.3-12 – Singly connected
55