I am trying to implement a simpler version of this algorithm but which works better than the quadratic algorithm. My idea basically is to sort the points by only x coordinate and try to solve it from there. Once I sort my array of points by x coordinate, I want to iterate over the array and basically skip over points whose distance is greater than the first two points I took at.

For example, my currentminDist = x;

If the two pair of points I am looking at have distance > x (only by its x coord dist), I ignore the point and move past it in the array.

I have the idea down, but I am kind of stuck on how to actually implement this (especially the condition part). I have a function that returns me the distance between two points based on their x coordinate.

I am confused on how to actually write my conditions for my loop since I want to ignore a point if the distance happens to be too far and still fill out my array which will contain the answers for closest points for each i (i being current point I am looking at).

Any tips or directions would be greatly appreciated. I am not very knowledgeable in coding algorithms so its quite frustrating.

Here is part of my code:

for (i = 0; i < numofmypoints; i++)
        {
            for (int j = i + 1; (j < numpofmypoints) && ((inputpoints[j].x - inputpoints[i].x) < currbest); j++ )
            {
                currdist = Auxilary.distbyX(inputpoints[i],inputpoints[j]);

                if (currdist < bestdist) 
                {
                 closest[i] = j;
                 bestdist = currdist;

                }
            }
        }

distbyX is my function that just returns the distance between two points.

Thanks!

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62% accept rate
@Paul: do you need to do this often? Wouldn't storing your points in a "quadtree" help? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadtree – TacticalCoder Feb 23 at 1:13
1  
Note that you may get better performance than with the naive algorithm, but you will still be O(n^2) though. – ARRG Feb 23 at 1:15
Why is there currbest and bestdist in your code? What is the difference? – Ishtar Feb 23 at 14:57
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2 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Fast Algorithm using a KD-Tree
This algorithm creates a kd-tree and then finds the closest pair for each point. Creating the kd-tree is O(n log2n), and finding the closest neighbour of a point is O(logn). Credit must go to Wikipedia, which in one article explains how to create kd-trees and also how to use them to find the closest neighbour.

import java.util.*;

public class Program
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        List<Point> points = generatePoints();
        Point[] closest = new Point[points.size()];

        KDTree tree = new KDTree(points, 0); // WILL MODIFY 'points'

        for (int i = 0; i < points.size(); i++)
        {
            closest[i] = tree.findClosest(points.get(i));
        }

        for (int i = 0; i < points.size(); i++)
        {
            System.out.println(points.get(i) + " is closest to " + closest[i]);
        }
    }

    private static List<Point> generatePoints()
    {
        ArrayList<Point> points = new ArrayList<Point>();
        Random r = new Random();

        for (int i = 0; i < 1000; i++)
        {
            points.add(new Point(r.nextInt() % 1000, r.nextInt() % 1000));
        }

        return points;
    }
}

class Point
{
    public static final Point INFINITY
        = new Point(Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY,
                    Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY);

    public double[] coord; // coord[0] = x, coord[1] = y

    public Point(double x, double y)
    {
        coord = new double[] { x, y };
    }

    public double getX() { return coord[0]; }
    public double getY() { return coord[1]; }

    public double distance(Point p)
    {
        double dX = getX() - p.getX();
        double dY = getY() - p.getY();
        return Math.sqrt(dX * dX + dY * dY);
    }

    public boolean equals(Point p)
    {
        return (getX() == p.getX()) && (getY() == p.getY());
    }

    public String toString()
    {
        return "(" + getX() + ", " + getY() + ")";
    }

    public static class PointComp implements Comparator<Point>
    {
        int d; // the dimension to compare in (0 => x, 1 => y)

        public PointComp(int dimension)
        {
            d = dimension;
        }

        public int compare(Point a, Point b)
        {
            return (int) (a.coord[d] - b.coord[d]);
        }
    }
}

class KDTree
{
    // 2D k-d tree
    private KDTree childA, childB;
    private Point point; // defines the boundary
    private int d; // dimension: 0 => left/right split, 1 => up/down split

    public KDTree(List<Point> points, int depth)
    {
        childA = null;
        childB = null;
        d = depth % 2;

        // find median by sorting in dimension 'd' (either x or y)
        Comparator<Point> comp = new Point.PointComp(d);
        Collections.sort(points, comp);

        int median = (points.size() - 1) / 2;
        point = points.get(median);

        // Create childA and childB recursively.
        // WARNING: subList() does not create a true copy,
        // so the original will get modified.
        if (median > 0)
        {
            childA = new KDTree(
                points.subList(0, median),
                depth + 1);
        }
        if (median + 1 < points.size())
        {
            childB = new KDTree(
                points.subList(median + 1, points.size()),
                depth + 1);
        }
    }

    public Point findClosest(Point target)
    {
        Point closest = point.equals(target) ? Point.INFINITY : point;
        double bestDist = closest.distance(target);
        double spacing = target.coord[d] - point.coord[d];
        KDTree rightSide = (spacing < 0) ? childA : childB;
        KDTree otherSide = (spacing < 0) ? childB : childA;

        /*
         * The 'rightSide' is the side on which 'target' lies
         * and the 'otherSide' is the other one. It is possible
         * that 'otherSide' will not have to be searched.
         */

        if (rightSide != null)
        {
            Point candidate = rightSide.findClosest(target);
            if (candidate.distance(target) < bestDist)
            {
                closest = candidate;
                bestDist = closest.distance(target);
            }
        }

        if (otherSide != null && (Math.abs(spacing) < bestDist))
        {
            Point candidate = otherSide.findClosest(target);
            if (candidate.distance(target) < bestDist)
            {
                closest = candidate;
                bestDist = closest.distance(target);
            }
        }

        return closest;
    }
}


Fix to the code in the question
If you really don't worry about the complexity, the only problem with your code is that you look forward but not backwards. Just duplicate the inner loop and make j go from (i - 1) to 0:

Point[] points = sort(input());
int[] closest = new int[points.length];

for (int i = 0; i < points.length; i++)
{
    double bestdist = Double.POSITIVE_INFINITY;

    for (int j = i + 1; (j < points.length) && ((points[j].x - points[i].x) < bestdist); j++ )
    {
        double currdist = dist(points[i], points[j]);

        if (currdist < bestdist)
        {
            closest[i] = j;
            bestdist = currdist;
        }
    }
    for (int j = i - 1; (j >= 0) && ((points[i].x - points[j].x) < bestdist); j-- )
    {
        double currdist = dist(points[i], points[j]);

        if (currdist < bestdist)
        {
            closest[i] = j;
            bestdist = currdist;
        }
    }
}
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I am not worried about the worst case. I am assuming all the x values are distinct. That's why I want to try and solve it the way I laid it out. Your way makes sense where I can use a data structure to solve it, but I was wondering if it could be solved the way I described. I ran into the problem of it not calculating the nearest point for all the points, it only calculates it for a a few of them and the remaining are all just the same point repeated over and over. So it's why I was trying to see if I was going wrong somewhere. – Paul Feb 23 at 3:34
The classic 'Closest pair of points' problem is to find the pair of points which are closest to each other. Only now I realise that your problem is a different one - find the closest neighbour for each point. I will update my answer as soon as I can think of an algorithm. – tom Feb 23 at 6:06
@Paul: I couldn't figure out a way to improve your sweepline to O(good), so I did it using a kd-tree. – tom Feb 23 at 13:03
interesting algorithm – Saeed Amiri Feb 23 at 18:48
Ah yes, I looked at the kd tree implementation. I used a quad tree to solve it when I was using a data structure. But I wanted to implement a simpler sweep line algorithm and I could not figure out why my array was not being filled out. That makes a lot of sense now looking at it now. – Paul Feb 23 at 23:01
feedback

Your algorithm doesn't work because it's cheating. Look here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closest_pair_of_points_problem how it works. Basically it's divide the point's recursively into half. But I don't know to code either.

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There is more than one algorithm to skin this cat. The algorithm the OP describes is called a sweepline algorithm, and it's a perfectly valid algorithm for this problem. See this paper by Michiel Smid. – tom Feb 23 at 1:22
@tom: Shall I update wikipedia? – Chibox Feb 23 at 1:40
The Wikipedia article is perfectly correct. It never says anywhere that the recursive divide-and-conquer algorithm is the only way to solve the problem. If you would like to add the sweepline algorithm to the article, then sure, go ahead. It already has this TopCoder article in the references. – tom Feb 23 at 1:49
@tom: I didn't see this. Maybe it's good to add this to the article not only to the references. But adding a code to the recursive algorithm would solve OP problem too. – Chibox Feb 23 at 1:52
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