4

I have hundreds of keys for example like:

  • redapple
  • maninred
  • foraman
  • blueapple

i have data related to these keys, data is a string and has related key at the end.

  • redapple: the-tree-has-redapple
  • maninred: she-saw-the-maninred
  • foraman: they-bought-the-present-foraman
  • blueapple: it-was-surprising-but-it-was-a-blueapple

i am expected to use hash table and hash function to record the data according to keys and i am expected to be able to retieve data from table.

i know to use hash function and hash table, there is no problem here.

But;

i am expected to give the program a string which takes place as a substring and retrieve the data for the matching keys.

For example:

i must give "red" and must be able to get

  • redapple: the-tree-has-redapple
  • maninred: she-saw-the-maninred

as output.

or

i must give "apple" and must be able to get

  • redapple: the-tree-has-redapple
  • blueapple: it-was-surprising-but-it-was-a-blueapple

as output.

i only can think to search all keys if they has a matching substring, is there some other solution? If i search all the key strings for every query, use of hashing is unneeded, meaningless, is it?

But, searching all keys for substring is O(N), i am expected to solve the problem with O(1).

With hashing i can hash a key e.g. "redapple" to e.g. 943, and "maninred" to e.g. 332.

And query man give the string "red" how can i found out from 943 and 332 that the keys has "red" substring? It is out of my cs thinking skills.

Thanks for any advise, idea.

7
  • 1
    Why are you "expected to use hashtable"? suffix tree will fit much better.
    – amit
    May 10, 2012 at 8:17
  • Also, you cannot do it in O(1) I believe, since for the string "" (empty string) you will have to output the entire collection. Also, when talking about strings, reading a string is usually regarded as O(|S|) and not O(1)
    – amit
    May 10, 2012 at 8:22
  • @amit Will suffix trees help if the substring is in the middle of the key?
    – Adam Matan
    May 10, 2012 at 8:54
  • thanks for responses, it is not the first problem to consider the operation time inside string. @deathApril yes this is a homework but i do not want the solution. i want to know if the q was asked right. i only wonder should i search all strings for given substring(query parameter/search input), or predict like an oracle if the hash codes tell me their key string has the substring
    – merveotesi
    May 10, 2012 at 9:12
  • 2
    @AdamMatan: Sure it will - if there is a string s that t is a substring of s, then t will be a prefix - of some suffix of s. You can discover it easily by traversing the tree.
    – amit
    May 10, 2012 at 10:14

3 Answers 3

3

Possible you should use the invert index for n-gramm, the same approach is used for spell correction. For word redapple you will have following set of 3-gramms red, eda, dap, app, ppl, ple. For each n-gramm you will have a list of string in which contains it. For example for red it will be

red -> maninred, redapple

words in this list must be ordered. When you want to find the all string that contains a a give substring, you dived the substring on n-gramm and intercept the list of words for n-gramm.

This alogriphm is not O(n), but it practice it has enough speed.

7
  • thanks very much for detailed answer, i understood you detail the first choice in my question, i must iterate over all the list of words for a given input. for a search input i must look to every word's n-grams. did i understand right?
    – merveotesi
    May 10, 2012 at 11:09
  • 1
    Note that the list of all n-grams is O(n^2) space, and it will make each insert() and remove() op slower by a factor of at least O(logn), since the relevant location in the index should be found first.
    – amit
    May 10, 2012 at 11:21
  • hey somebody to answer me please, there is no chance to not to look for the words in the key list which has the input substring, am i right? I only wonder if there is a magical way to predict the hash codes of keys only looking at the input-search-substring?
    – merveotesi
    May 10, 2012 at 11:37
  • or is there a way to write a magic hash function that when i give the input-search-substring to it, it says me the locations of the key's which has the substring in them?
    – merveotesi
    May 10, 2012 at 11:53
  • tuxi first question Yes first you should build index of the words. When you search possibly you can the smallest set and iterate only through it or using same special algorithm for list intersections. May 10, 2012 at 14:29
3

It cannot be nicely done in a hash table. Given a a substring - you cannot predict the hashed result of the entire string1

A reasonable alternative is using a suffix tree. Each terminal in the suffix tree will hold list of references of the complete strings, this suffix is related to.

Given a substring t, if it is indeed a substring of some s in your collection, then there is a suffix x of s - such that t is a prefix of x. By traversing the suffix tree while reading t, and find all the terminals reachable from the the node you reached from there. These terminals contain all the needed strings.


(1) assuming reasonable hash function, if hashCode() == 0 for each element, you can obviously predict the hash value.

1
  • A suffix array is the better solution. You can do it with a hash table too however by making an index of all the substrings up to a certain length where they become virtually unique, similar to what was suggested in the accepted answer. Feb 10, 2020 at 0:03
-1

I have researched this problem recently and i'm sure that this can not be done. I hope hash table will help me improve speed of searching like you but it makes me disapointed.

4
  • This can be done, it is the accepted answer. You make an index of all the substrings or possibly just the n-grams you are interested in. Then you lookup into this index. But that is only if you insist on using a hash table, a suffix array would be even more suitable. Feb 10, 2020 at 0:01
  • That would be too complex. With a table has about 1 million record, I'll have many million subtrings and this is bad.
    – May'Habit
    Feb 10, 2020 at 15:03
  • 1
    Many million substrings is just a few megabytes, you realise that? Feb 10, 2020 at 16:50
  • 1
    my mistake, I'll research this problem
    – May'Habit
    Feb 11, 2020 at 9:57

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.