specify the values of the parameters when a procedure is called.
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binary search
a search algorithm that repeatedly divides a sorted list to narrow in on the searched-for item
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brute force
solve by trial and error; trying every possible option
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decidable problems
problems in which an algorithm can be constructed to answer 'yes' or 'no' for all inputs (e.g., 'is the number even?').
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decision problem
a problem that has a yes or no answer
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distributed computing
a computational model in which multiple networked computers are used to run a program
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efficiency
how well an algorithm uses time and memory/space resources, CPU and RAM.
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heuristic algorithm
finds an approximate solution for a hard problem; helpful for finding a solution in a reasonable amount of time
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instance of a problem
includes specific input. For example, sorting is a problem, and sorting the list (2,3,1,7) is an instance of the problem.
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intractable problems
practically impossible to solve in a
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linear or sequential search
an algorithm that checks ever element in a list from the start to the end of the list to find an item.
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more efficient
this usually means it runs faster or uses less space.
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optimization problem
the goal of finding the best solution among many
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parallel computing
a computational model where a problem or program is broken into multiple smaller sequential computing operations some of which are performed simultaneously in parallel. This is usually on one computer with multiple processors, but it could also use multiple computers
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parameters
are input variables for a procedure.
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reasonable time
polynomial time
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sequential computing
a computational model in which operations are performed in order, one at a time on one processor or computer
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sorting algorithm
puts a list into alphabetic or numeric order.
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speedup
For a parallel solution, this is measured in the time it took to complete the task sequentially divided by the time it took to complete the task when done in parallel
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The Halting Problem
The undecidable problem of determining whether a computer program will produce an answer at some point or loop forever on a given input
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The Traveling Salesman Problem
Given a list of cities and the distances between them find the shortest path visiting each city once and returning to the start.
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undecidable problems
have no algorithm that can be constructed that always leads to a correct yes-or-no answer