IRIX 6.5 » Books » Developer »
Standard Template Library Programmer's Guide
(document number: 007-3426-004 / published: 1999-05-21)
table of contents | additional info | download
find in page
make_heap
 |
 |
| Category: algorithms |
Component type: function |
Prototype
Make_heap is an overloaded name; there are actually two
make_heap functions.
template <class RandomAccessIterator>
void make_heap(RandomAccessIterator first, RandomAccessIterator last);
template <class RandomAccessIterator, class StrictWeakOrdering>
void make_heap(RandomAccessIterator first, RandomAccessIterator last,
StrictWeakOrdering comp);
Description
Make_heap turns the range
[first, last) into a heap
[1].
The two versions of make_heap differ in how they define whether one
element is less than another. The first version compares
objects using operator<, and the second compares objects using
a function object comp.
In the first version the postcondition is that is_heap(first, last)
is true, and in the second version the
postcondition is that is_heap(first, last, comp) is true.
Definition
Defined in the standard header
algorithm, and in the nonstandard
backward-compatibility header
algo.h.
Requirements on types
For the first version:
-
RandomAccessIterator is a model of Random Access Iterator.
-
RandomAccessIterator is mutable.
-
RandomAccessIterator's value type is a model of LessThan Comparable.
-
The ordering on objects of RandomAccessIterator's value type is a strict
weak ordering, as defined in the LessThan Comparable requirements.
For the second version:
-
RandomAccessIterator is a model of Random Access Iterator.
-
RandomAccessIterator is mutable.
-
StrictWeakOrdering is a model of Strict Weak Ordering.
-
RandomAccessIterator's value type is convertible to
StrictWeakOrdering's argument type.
Preconditions
-
[first, last) is a valid range.
Complexity
Linear. At most
3*(last - first) comparisons.
Example
int main()
{
int A[] = {1, 4, 2, 8, 5, 7};
const int N = sizeof(A) / sizeof(int);
make_heap(A, A+N);
copy(A, A+N, ostream_iterator<int>(cout, " "));
cout << endl;
sort_heap(A, A+N);
copy(A, A+N, ostream_iterator<int>(cout, " "));
cout << endl;
}
Notes
[1]
A heap is a particular way of ordering the elements in a range of
Random Access Iterators [f, l). The reason heaps are useful
(especially for sorting, or as priority queues) is that they satisfy
two important properties. First, *f is the largest element in the
heap. Second, it is possible to add an element to a heap (using
push_heap), or to remove *f, in logarithmic time.
Internally, a heap is simply a tree represented as a sequential range.
The tree is constructed so that that each
node is less than or equal to its parent node.
See also
push_heap,
pop_heap,
sort_heap,
sort,
is_heap
Copyright ©
1999 Silicon Graphics, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
TrademarkInformation
Standard Template Library Programmer's Guide
(document number: 007-3426-004 / published: 1999-05-21)
table of contents | additional info | download
home/search |
what's new |
help