2.26 A majority element in an array, A, of size N is an element that appears more than N/2 times (thus, there is at most one). For example, the array 3, 3, 4, 2, 4, 4, 2, 4, 4 has a majority element (4), whereas the array
3, 3, 4, 2, 4, 4, 2, 4 does not. If there is no majority element, your program should indicate this. Here
is a sketch of an algorithm to solve the problem:
First, a candidate majority element is found (this is the harder part). This candidate is the
only element that could possibly be the majority element. The second step determines if
this candidate is actually the majority. This is just a sequential search through the array. To
find a candidate in the array, A, form a second array, B. Then compare A1 and A2. If they
are equal, add one of these to B; otherwise do nothing. Then compare A3 and A4. Again if
they are equal, add one of these to B; otherwise do nothing. Continue in this fashion until
the entire array is read. Then recursively find a candidate for B; this is the candidate for
A (why?).
a. How does the recursion terminate?
#b. How is the case where N is odd handled?
#c. What is the running time of the algorithm?
d. How can we avoid using an extra array B?
#e. Write a program to compute the majority element.
 
 
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