Raita algorithm
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In computer science, the Raita algorithm is a string searching algorithm which improves the performance of Boyer–Moore–Horspool algorithm. This algorithm preprocesses the string being searched for the pattern, which is similar to Boyer–Moore string-search algorithm. The searching pattern of particular sub-string in a given string is different from Boyer–Moore–Horspool algorithm. This algorithm was published by Timo Raita in 1991.[1]
Description
[edit ]Raita algorithm searches for a pattern "P" in a given text "T" by comparing each character of pattern in the given text. Searching will be done as follows. Window for a text "T" is defined as the length of "P".
- First, last character of the pattern is compared with the rightmost character of the window.
- If there is a match, first character of the pattern is compared with the leftmost character of the window.
- If they match again, it compares the middle character of the pattern with middle character of the window.
If everything in the pre-check is successful, then the original comparison starts from the second character to last but one. If there is a mismatch at any stage in the algorithm, it performs the bad character shift function which was computed in pre-processing phase. Bad character shift function is identical to the one proposed in Boyer–Moore–Horspool algorithm.[1]
A modern formulation of a similar pre-check is found in std::string::find, a linear/quadratic string-matcher, in libc++ and libstdc++. Assuming a well-optimized version of memcmp, not skipping characters in the "original comparison" tends to be more efficient as the pattern is likely to be aligned.[2]
C Code for Raita algorithm
[edit ]#include<limits.h> #include<stddef.h> #define ALPHABET_SIZE (1 << CHAR_BITS) /* typically 256 */ /* Preprocessing: the BMH bad-match table. */ staticinlinevoidpreBmBc(char*pat,size_tlpat,ptrdiff_tbmBc[]){ size_ti; for(i=0;i<ALPHABET_SIZE;++i) bmBc[i]=lpat; for(i=0;i<lpat-1;++i) bmBc[pat[i]]=lpat-i-1; } voidRAITA(char*pat,size_tlpat,char*s,size_tn){ ptrdiff_tbmBc[ALPHABET_SIZE]; /* Quick edge cases. */ if(lpat==0||lpat>n) return; if(lpat==1){ char*match_ptr=s; while(match_ptr<s+n){ match_ptr=memchr(match_ptr,pat[0],n-(match_ptr-s)); if(match_ptr!=NULL){ OUTPUT(match_ptr-s); match_ptr++; }else return; } } preBmBc(pat,lpat,bmBc); /* The prematch-window. */ charfirstCh=pat[0]; charmiddleCh=pat[lpat/2]; charlastCh=pat[lpat-1]; /* Searching */ ptrdiff_tj=0; while(j<=n-m){ charc=s[j+lpat-1]; /* This could harm data locality on long patterns. For these consider reducing * the number of pre-tests, or using more clustered indices. */ if(lastCh==c&&middleCh==s[j+lpat/2]&&firstCh==s[j]&& memcmp(&pat[1],&s[j+1],lpat-2)==0) OUTPUT(j); j+=bmBc[c]; } }
Example
[edit ]Pattern: abddb
Text:abbaabaabddbabadbb
Pre- Processing stage:
a b d 4 3 1
Attempt 1: abbaabaabddbabadbb ....b Shift by 4 (bmBc[a])
Comparison of last character of pattern to rightmost character in the window. It's a mismatch and shifted by 4 according to the value in pre-processing stage.
Attempt 2: abbaabaabddbabadbb A.d.B Shift by 3 (bmBc[b])
Here last and first character of the pattern are matched but middle character is a mismatch. So the pattern is shifted according to the pre-processing stage.
Attempt 3: abbaabaabddbabadbb ABDDB Shift by 3 (bmBc[b])
We found exact match here but the algorithm continues until it can't move further.
Attempt 4: abbaabaABDDBabadbb ....b Shift by 4 (bmBc[a])
At this stage, we need to shift by 4 and we can't move the pattern by 4. So, the algorithm terminates. Letters in capital letter are exact match of the pattern in the text.
Complexity
[edit ]- Pre-processing stage takes O(m) time where "m" is the length of pattern "P".
- Searching stage takes O(mn) time complexity where "n" is the length of text "T".
See also
[edit ]References
[edit ]- ^ a b RAITA T., 1992, Tuning the Boyer–Moore–Horspool string searching algorithm, Software - Practice & Experience, 22(10):879-884 [1]
- ^ "⚙ D27068 Improve string::find". LLVM Code Review.