AbstractA sequence of priority queue operations can transform a permutation π of n elements to some, but not necessarily all, permutations σ. A recent result of Atkinson and Thiyagarajah (1993) states that the number of distinct transformation pairs (π, σ) is (n + 1)n −1. By Cayley's theorem this is also the number of labelled trees with n + 1 nodes. We present a direct correspondence between labelled trees and transformation pairs and a linear time algorithm for constructing the tree corresponding to a pair of permutations along with related results
AbstractA Cayley permutation (C-permutation for short) of length n is a permutation p of n elements ...
We introduce a framework for reducing the number of element comparisons performed in priority-queue ...
AbstractThe class SSn of stack sortable permutations is known to be in 1-1 correspondence with the s...
AbstractA sequence of priority queue operations can transform a permutation π of n elements to some,...
AbstractA k-bounded priority queue transforms an input sequence σ into an output sequence τ which is...
AbstractA k-bounded priority queue transforms an input sequence σ into an output sequence τ which is...
A priority queue, a container data structure equipped with the operations insert and delete-minimum,...
A k-bounded priority queue transforms an input sequence sigma into an output sequence tau which is a...
A priority queue transforms an input permutation a of some set of size n into an output permutation ...
A priority queue transforms an input permutation a of some set of size n into an output permutation ...
AbstractMachines whose sole function is to re-order their input data are considered. Every such mach...
AbstractWe consider a priority queue of unbounded capacity whose input is the sequence 1,2,…,n where...
We introduce in this paper a data structure named (L, U)- bounded priority queue, which particulariz...
Machines whose sole function is to re-order their input data are considered. Every such machine defi...
AbstractParking functions on [n] = {1, …, n} are those functions p: [n] → [n] satisfying the conditi...
AbstractA Cayley permutation (C-permutation for short) of length n is a permutation p of n elements ...
We introduce a framework for reducing the number of element comparisons performed in priority-queue ...
AbstractThe class SSn of stack sortable permutations is known to be in 1-1 correspondence with the s...
AbstractA sequence of priority queue operations can transform a permutation π of n elements to some,...
AbstractA k-bounded priority queue transforms an input sequence σ into an output sequence τ which is...
AbstractA k-bounded priority queue transforms an input sequence σ into an output sequence τ which is...
A priority queue, a container data structure equipped with the operations insert and delete-minimum,...
A k-bounded priority queue transforms an input sequence sigma into an output sequence tau which is a...
A priority queue transforms an input permutation a of some set of size n into an output permutation ...
A priority queue transforms an input permutation a of some set of size n into an output permutation ...
AbstractMachines whose sole function is to re-order their input data are considered. Every such mach...
AbstractWe consider a priority queue of unbounded capacity whose input is the sequence 1,2,…,n where...
We introduce in this paper a data structure named (L, U)- bounded priority queue, which particulariz...
Machines whose sole function is to re-order their input data are considered. Every such machine defi...
AbstractParking functions on [n] = {1, …, n} are those functions p: [n] → [n] satisfying the conditi...
AbstractA Cayley permutation (C-permutation for short) of length n is a permutation p of n elements ...
We introduce a framework for reducing the number of element comparisons performed in priority-queue ...
AbstractThe class SSn of stack sortable permutations is known to be in 1-1 correspondence with the s...