I want to iterate over an array in a certain fashion:
Starting with the first and the last element of the array, the next element I want to visit is the one furthest from all previously visited elements.
For an array of length n+1, the sequence would be
- 0,
- n,
- n/2 (furthest from 0 and n),
- n/4 and n*3/4 (furthest from all 3 previous indices),
- n/8, n*3/8, n*5/8, n*7/8, (furthest from all 5 previous indices)
- n*1/16, n*3/16, n*5/16, n*7/16, n*9/16, n*11/16, n*13/16, n*15/16
- ...
if n is not a power of two, then some of these numbers will have to be rounded up or down, but I am not sure how to avoid duplicates when rounding.
At the end I want an integer sequence that contains all the numbers between 0 and n exactly once. (For any n, not just powers of two)
Is there a name for this permutation?
How would a function that generates these numbers work?
I am looking for a function that can generate these numbers on-the-fly.
If there are a billion elements, I do not want to manage a giant list of all previously visited elements, or generate the whole permutation list in advance.
The idea is that I can abort the iteration once I have found an element that fits certain criteria, so I will in most cases not need the whole permutation sequence.
So I am looking for a function f(int currentIndex, int maxIndex)
with the following properties:
To interate over an array of size 8, i would call
f(0,8) returns 0, to get the index of the first element
f(1,8) returns 8
f(2,8) returns 4
f(3,8) returns 2
f(4,8) returns 6
f(5,8) returns 1
f(6,8) returns 3
f(7,8) returns 5
f(8,8) returns 7
(I am not quite sure how to extend this example to numbers that are not a power of two)
Is there a function with these properties?