On the Number of Quantifiers Needed to Define Boolean Functions
Marco Carmosino, Ronald Fagin, et al.
MFCS 2024
Extendible hashing is a new access technique, in which the user is guaranteed no more than two page faults to locate the data associated with a given unique identifier, or key. Unlike conventional hashing, extendible hashing has a dynamic structure that grows and shrinks gracefully as the database grows and shrinks. This approach simultaneously solves the problem of making hash tables that are extendible and of making radix search trees that are balanced. We study, by analysis and simulation, the performance of extendible hashing. The results indicate that extendible hashing provides an attractive alternative to other access methods, such as balanced trees. © 1979, ACM. All rights reserved.
Marco Carmosino, Ronald Fagin, et al.
MFCS 2024
Nicholas Pippenger
Journal of Computer and System Sciences
Ronald Fagin, Joseph Y. Halpern, et al.
Annals of Pure and Applied Logic
Ronald Fagin, Ravi Kumar, et al.
SODA 1998