In computer science, a mergeable heap (also called a meldable heap) is an abstract data type, which is a heap supporting a merge operation.
Definition
A mergeable heap supports the usual heap operations:
Make-Heap(), create an empty heap.Insert(H,x), insert an elementxinto the heapH.Min(H), return the minimum element, orNilif no such element exists.Extract-Min(H), extract and return the minimum element, orNilif no such element exists.
And one more that distinguishes it:
Merge(H1,H2), combine the elements ofH1andH2into a single heap.
Trivial implementation
It is straightforward to implement a mergeable heap given a simple heap:
Merge(H1,H2):
x ← Extract-Min(H2)while x ≠ NilInsert(H1, x)x ← Extract-Min(H2)
This can however be wasteful as each Extract-Min(H) and Insert(H,x) typically have to maintain the heap property.
More efficient implementations
Examples of mergeable heap data structures include:
- Binomial heap
- Fibonacci heap
- Leftist tree
- Pairing heap
- Skew heap
A more complete list with performance comparisons can be found at Heap (data structure) § Comparison of theoretic bounds for variants.
In most mergeable heap structures, merging is the fundamental operation on which others are based. Insertion is implemented by merging a new single-element heap with the existing heap. Deletion is implemented by merging the children of the deleted node.
See also
- Addressable heap
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