Difference between revisions of "cpp/algorithm/qsort"
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Despite the name, C++, C, and POSIX standards do not require this function to be implemented using [[enwiki:Quicksort|quicksort]] or make any complexity or stability guarantees. | Despite the name, C++, C, and POSIX standards do not require this function to be implemented using [[enwiki:Quicksort|quicksort]] or make any complexity or stability guarantees. | ||
− | The type of the elements of the array must be a | + | The type of the elements of the array must be a {{concept|TrivialType}}, otherwise the behavior is undefined. |
The two overloads provided by the C++ standard library are distinct because the types of the parameter {{tt|comp}} are distinct ([[cpp/language/language linkage|language linkage]] is part of its type) | The two overloads provided by the C++ standard library are distinct because the types of the parameter {{tt|comp}} are distinct ([[cpp/language/language linkage|language linkage]] is part of its type) |
Revision as of 01:59, 4 August 2015
Defined in header <cstdlib>
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extern "C" void qsort( void *ptr, std::size_t count, std::size_t size, int (*comp)(const void *, const void *) ); |
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extern "C++" void qsort( void *ptr, std::size_t count, std::size_t size, int (*comp)(const void *, const void *) ); |
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Sorts the given array pointed to by ptr
in ascending order. The array contains count
elements of size
bytes. Function pointed to by comp
is used for object comparison.
If comp
indicates two elements as equivalent, their order is undefined.
Contents |
Parameters
ptr | - | pointer to the array to sort |
count | - | number of element in the array |
size | - | size of each element in the array in bytes |
comp | - | comparison function which returns a negative integer value if the first argument is less than the second, a positive integer value if the first argument is greater than the second and zero if the arguments are equivalent. The signature of the comparison function should be equivalent to the following: int cmp(const void *a, const void *b); The function must not modify the objects passed to it and must return consistent results when called for the same objects, regardless of their positions in the array. |
Return value
(none)
Notes
Despite the name, C++, C, and POSIX standards do not require this function to be implemented using quicksort or make any complexity or stability guarantees.
The type of the elements of the array must be a Template:concept, otherwise the behavior is undefined.
The two overloads provided by the C++ standard library are distinct because the types of the parameter comp
are distinct (language linkage is part of its type)
Example
The following code sorts an array of integers using qsort()
.
#include <iostream> #include <cstdlib> #include <climits> int main() { int a[] = {-2, 99, 0, -743, 2, INT_MIN, 4}; constexpr std::size_t size = sizeof a / sizeof *a; std::qsort(a, size, sizeof *a, [](const void* a, const void* b) { int arg1 = *static_cast<const int*>(a); int arg2 = *static_cast<const int*>(b); if(arg1 < arg2) return -1; if(arg1 > arg2) return 1; return 0; // return (arg1 > arg2) - (arg1 < arg2); // possible shortcut // return arg1 - arg2; // erroneous shortcut (fails if INT_MIN is present) }); for (int ai : a) std::cout << ai << ' '; }
Output:
-2147483648 -743 -2 0 2 4 99
See also
searches an array for an element of unspecified type (function) | |
sorts a range into ascending order (function template) | |
(C++11) |
checks if a type is trivial (class template) |
C documentation for qsort
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