An
activity-selection is the problem of scheduling a resource among several
competing activity.
Problem Statement
Given a set S of n activities with and start time, Si and fi, finish time of an ith activity. Find the maximum size set of mutually compatible activities.
Compatible Activities
Activities i and j are compatible if the half-open internal [si, fi) and [sj, fj)
do not overlap, that is, i and j are compatible if si ≥ fj and sj ≥ fi
Greedy Algorithm for Selection Problem
I. Sort the input activities by increasing finishing time.
f1 ≤ f2 ≤ . . . ≤ fnII. Call GREEDY-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR (s, f)
- n = length [s]
- A={i}
- j = 1
- for i = 2 to n
- do if si ≥ fj
- then A= AU{i}
- j = i
- return set A
Operation of the algorithm
Let 11 activities are given S = {p, q, r, s, t, u, v, w, x, y, z} start and finished times for proposed activities are (1, 4), (3, 5), (0, 6), 5, 7), (3, 8), 5, 9), (6, 10), (8, 11), (8, 12), (2, 13) and (12, 14).
A = {p} Initialization at line 2
A = {p, s} line 6 - 1st iteration of FOR - loop
A = {p, s, w} line 6 -2nd iteration of FOR - loop
A = {p, s, w, z} line 6 - 3rd iteration of FOR-loop
Out of the FOR-loop and Return A = {p, s, w, z}
Analysis
Part I requires O(n lg n) time (use merge of heap sort).
Part II requires θ(n) time assuming that activities were already sorted in part I by their finish time.
Correctness
Note that Greedy algorithm do not always produce optimal solutions but GREEDY-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR does.
Theorem Algorithm GREED-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR produces solution of maximum size for the activity-selection problem.
Proof Idea Show the activity problem satisfied
- Greedy choice property.
- Optimal substructure property.
Proof
As an example consider the example. Given a set of activities to among lecture halls. Schedule
all the activities using minimal lecture halls.
In order to determine which activity should use which lecture hall, the
algorithm uses the GREEDY-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR to calculate the activities in the
first lecture hall. If there are some activities yet to be scheduled, a new
lecture hall is selected and GREEDY-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR is called again. This
continues until all activities have been scheduled.
LECTURE-HALL-ASSIGNMENT (s, f)
n = length [s)
for i = 1 to n
do HALL [i] = NIL
k = 1
while (Not empty (s))
do HALL [k] = GREEDY-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR (s, t, n)
k = k + 1
return HALL
Following changes can be made in the GREEDY-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR (s, f) (see CLR).
j = first (s)
A = i
for i = j + 1 to n
do if s(i) not= "-"
then ifGREED-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR (s, f, n)
j = first (s)
A = i = j + 1 to n
if s(i] not = "-" then
if s[i] ≥ f[j]|
then A = AU{i}
s[i] = "-"
j = i
return A
Correctness
The algorithm can be shown to be correct and optimal. As a contradiction, assume the number of lecture halls are not optimal, that is, the algorithm allocates more hall than necessary. Therefore, there exists a set of activities B which have been wrongly allocated. An activity b belonging to B which has been allocated to hall H[i] should have optimally been allocated to H[k]. This implies that the activities for lecture hall H[k] have not been allocated optimally, as the GREED-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR produces the optimal set of activities for a particular lecture hall.
Analysis
In the worst case, the number of lecture halls require is n. GREED-ACTIVITY-SELECTOR runs in θ(n). The running time of this algorithm is O(n2).
Two important Observations
Dynamic-Programming Algorithm for the Activity-Selection Problem