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  2. Heapsort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heapsort

    The heapsort algorithm can be divided into two phases: heap construction, and heap extraction. The heap is an implicit data structure which takes no space beyond the array of objects to be sorted; the array is interpreted as a complete binary tree where each array element is a node and each node's parent and child links are defined by simple arithmetic on the array indexes.

  3. Adaptive heap sort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_heap_sort

    In computer science, adaptive heap sort is a comparison-based sorting algorithm of the adaptive sort family. It is a variant of heap sort that performs better when the data contains existing order. Published by Christos Levcopoulos and Ola Petersson in 1992, the algorithm utilizes a new measure of presortedness, Osc, as the number of ...

  4. Smoothsort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoothsort

    In computer science, smoothsort is a comparison-based sorting algorithm.A variant of heapsort, it was invented and published by Edsger Dijkstra in 1981. [1] Like heapsort, smoothsort is an in-place algorithm with an upper bound of O(n log n) operations (see big O notation), [2] but it is not a stable sort.

  5. Talk:Heapsort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Heapsort

    The following test vector {2,5,3,4,1} returned {1,2,4,3,5}. Many other failing examples have been found. The problem seems to be in the build heap portion of the code, which sometimes fails to create a valid max-heap. When the sift_in function is replaced with a simpler sift_down function for building the heap, the code works.

  6. Integer sorting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integer_sorting

    In computer science, integer sorting is the algorithmic problem of sorting a collection of data values by integer keys. Algorithms designed for integer sorting may also often be applied to sorting problems in which the keys are floating point numbers, rational numbers, or text strings. [1]

  7. Binary heap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_heap

    An algorithm for splitting a heap on n elements into two heaps on k and n-k elements, respectively, based on a new view of heaps as an ordered collections of subheaps was presented in. [15] The algorithm requires O(log n * log n) comparisons. The view also presents a new and conceptually simple algorithm for merging heaps.

  8. Pile (abstract data type) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pile_(abstract_data_type)

    The first version combines the properties of the double-ended queue (deque) and a priority queue and may be described as an ordered deque.. An item may be added to the head of the list if the new item is valued less than or equal to the current head or to the tail of the list if the new item is greater than or equal to the current tail.

  9. sort (C++) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sort_(C++)

    sort is a generic function in the C++ Standard Library for doing comparison sorting.The function originated in the Standard Template Library (STL).. The specific sorting algorithm is not mandated by the language standard and may vary across implementations, but the worst-case asymptotic complexity of the function is specified: a call to sort must perform no more than O(N log N) comparisons ...