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More elegant coding for merge_sort_fastest (#804)
* More elegant coding for merge_sort_fastest * More elegant coding for merge_sort
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@ -29,36 +29,20 @@ def merge_sort(collection):
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>>> merge_sort([-2, -5, -45])
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[-45, -5, -2]
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"""
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length = len(collection)
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if length > 1:
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midpoint = length // 2
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left_half = merge_sort(collection[:midpoint])
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right_half = merge_sort(collection[midpoint:])
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i = 0
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j = 0
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k = 0
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left_length = len(left_half)
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right_length = len(right_half)
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while i < left_length and j < right_length:
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if left_half[i] < right_half[j]:
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collection[k] = left_half[i]
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i += 1
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else:
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collection[k] = right_half[j]
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j += 1
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k += 1
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while i < left_length:
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collection[k] = left_half[i]
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i += 1
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k += 1
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while j < right_length:
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collection[k] = right_half[j]
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j += 1
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k += 1
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return collection
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def merge(left, right):
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'''merge left and right
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:param left: left collection
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:param right: right collection
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:return: merge result
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'''
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result = []
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while left and right:
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result.append(left.pop(0) if left[0] <= right[0] else right.pop(0))
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return result + left + right
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if len(collection) <= 1:
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return collection
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mid = len(collection) // 2
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return merge(merge_sort(collection[:mid]), merge_sort(collection[mid:]))
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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@ -69,4 +53,4 @@ if __name__ == '__main__':
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user_input = raw_input('Enter numbers separated by a comma:\n').strip()
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unsorted = [int(item) for item in user_input.split(',')]
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print(merge_sort(unsorted))
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print(*merge_sort(unsorted), sep=',')
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@ -1,19 +1,46 @@
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'''
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Python implementation of merge sort algorithm.
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Python implementation of the fastest merge sort algorithm.
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Takes an average of 0.6 microseconds to sort a list of length 1000 items.
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Best Case Scenario : O(n)
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Worst Case Scenario : O(n)
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'''
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def merge_sort(LIST):
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start = []
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end = []
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while len(LIST) > 1:
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a = min(LIST)
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b = max(LIST)
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start.append(a)
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end.append(b)
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LIST.remove(a)
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LIST.remove(b)
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if LIST: start.append(LIST[0])
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from __future__ import print_function
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def merge_sort(collection):
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"""Pure implementation of the fastest merge sort algorithm in Python
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:param collection: some mutable ordered collection with heterogeneous
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comparable items inside
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:return: a collection ordered by ascending
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Examples:
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>>> merge_sort([0, 5, 3, 2, 2])
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[0, 2, 2, 3, 5]
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>>> merge_sort([])
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[]
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>>> merge_sort([-2, -5, -45])
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[-45, -5, -2]
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"""
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start, end = [], []
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while len(collection) > 1:
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min_one, max_one = min(collection), max(collection)
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start.append(min_one)
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end.append(max_one)
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collection.remove(min_one)
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collection.remove(max_one)
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end.reverse()
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return (start + end)
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return start + collection + end
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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try:
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raw_input # Python 2
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except NameError:
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raw_input = input # Python 3
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user_input = raw_input('Enter numbers separated by a comma:\n').strip()
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unsorted = [int(item) for item in user_input.split(',')]
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print(*merge_sort(unsorted), sep=',')
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