I have an array of ints in C# and I want to get 5% of the whole array, in the way that the new array includes the most frequent similar values. For an example, say I have an array with 100 entries that includes 40 siblings of 20 (15 to 25). What I want is to detect the 20 as the most frequent value (including it's siblings) as a new array and then 5 most frequent values inside the new array. I need to run the code on an ASP.net website and because of that, I need a fast algorithem. Could anyone help me with this please?
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2What will your real array size be? How clustered will the data be, and do you know the actual ranges?– Jon SkeetAug 20, 2013 at 17:07
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1Side note: there is no real causation between "run the code on an ASP.net website" and "need a fast algorithm"... It often quite opposite - running slow/complicated code on server...– Alexei LevenkovAug 20, 2013 at 17:13
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@JonSkeet The array may be as big as 1024*1024 in size and the ranges are between 0 and 255. In fact the array is a byte array. If it is important, I will change my question to fit that. The cluster may be 10.– Rojan Gh.Aug 20, 2013 at 17:17
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@AlexeiLevenkov So what one can do if a website should offer graphic services like setting the theme color of a page using the most frequent color inside a picture used inside that page dynamically?– Rojan Gh.Aug 20, 2013 at 17:20
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I don't know. I think the search term you are looking for is "histogram" which should give you starting point for finding right algorithm.– Alexei LevenkovAug 20, 2013 at 17:30
2 Answers
You can build a simple algorithm by grouping the values, ordering by count, and then taking them until you fill the required 5% array, like this:
// Build a set of {Value, Count} pairs using LINQ
var counts = data
.GroupBy(v => v)
.Select(g => new {
Value = g => Key
, Count = g.Count()
}).OrderByDescending(p => p.Count)
.Take(5);
EDIT :
The array may be as big as 1024*1024 in size and the ranges are between 0 and 255
Since the range is very small, you can use counting array instead of a group, like this:
int counts = new int[256];
foreach (var b in data) {
counts[b]++;
}
Now you can run the Quick Select Algorithm to choose the fifth item. Here is an answer that provides a C# implementation of QuickSelect
.
var fifth = QuickSelect(counts, 5);
var res = new List<KeyValuePair<int,int>>();
for (int i = 0 ; i != counts.Length && res.Length != 5 ; i++) {
if (counts[i] >= fifth) {
res.Add(new KeyValuePair<int,int>(i, counts[i]));
}
}
You may want to replace the quick select algorithm with the median-of-medians algorithm, which has the same linear performance, but is not randomized.
var numbersByOccurrence = from numbers in yourNumberArrayVariable
group numbers by numbers into g
select new { Number = g.Key, Count = g.Count() };
var limitedSize = numbersByOccurrence.OrderByDescending(n => n.Count).Take(5);
You now have an variable (you can cast as an array or list) of 5 objects with a Number and Count variable you can easily access.
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Thanks for your answer. It is as good as the selected answer except I personally prefer lambda instead of Linq query. Aug 21, 2013 at 17:47