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The problem found in programming pearls column 8 is as follows:

Given the real vector x[n], compute the maximum sum found in any contiguous subvector.

The final solution provided is of O(n) complexity which is as follows:

std::vector<int> x;
int max_so_far = 0;
int max_here = 0;
for (std::size_t i = 0; i < x.size(); ++i)
{
   max_here = std::max(max_here + x[i], 0);
   max_so_far = std::max(max_so_far, max_here);
}

I would like to know how does one go about modifing the above algorithm to provide the minimum sum.

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4  
Set x[n] = -x[n] and run the max sum... – Aryabhatta Feb 7 '11 at 23:28
You could multiply all vector elements by -1, run the vector through the code above, and again multiply the sum found by -1. – toochin Feb 7 '11 at 23:29
@Reyzooti - I have a doubt. Does the term "subvector" include only the vectors starting from position 0? – Neo Feb 7 '11 at 23:41
If your vector contains all negative numbers, your code will fail. It will report that the maximum value is 0. Correct that by making the initial value of max_so_far equal to the lowest integer. – Jim Mischel Feb 8 '11 at 0:01
2  
@Jim: if subvector may include a subvector of length zero, then 0 is indeed the maximum sum when all numbers are negative. So it's correct. – DS. Feb 8 '11 at 1:47
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1 Answer

You only need to invert the sign of each element in x and then run the algorithm:

std::vector<int> x;
int max_so_far = 0;
int max_here = 0;

for (std::size_t i = 0; i < x.size(); ++i) x[i] = -x[i];

for (std::size_t i = 0; i < x.size(); ++i)
{
   max_here = std::max(max_here + x[i], 0);
   max_so_far = std::max(max_so_far, max_here);
}

int min_so_far = -max_so_far;
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This will not work. max of negative and zero will always be zero. – Neo Feb 7 '11 at 23:34
@Reyzooti: You thought was wrong. If you see I only added two lines of code... – Murilo Vasconcelos Feb 7 '11 at 23:35
@Neo: yes, because of that I inverted the sign of x's elements. – Murilo Vasconcelos Feb 7 '11 at 23:36
2  
@Neo: The original algorithm is also wrong! – Aryabhatta Feb 7 '11 at 23:37
@Moron - Exactly. Thats what confused me. – Neo Feb 7 '11 at 23:42
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