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  2. Quicksort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quicksort

    When the input is a random permutation, the pivot has a random rank, and so it is not guaranteed to be in the middle 50 percent. However, when we start from a random permutation, in each recursive call the pivot has a random rank in its list, and so it is in the middle 50 percent about half the time. That is good enough.

  3. Quickselect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quickselect

    Quickselect uses the same overall approach as quicksort, choosing one element as a pivot and partitioning the data in two based on the pivot, accordingly as less than or greater than the pivot. However, instead of recursing into both sides, as in quicksort, quickselect only recurses into one side – the side with the element it is searching for.

  4. The Quicksort algorithm has three steps: 1) Pick an element, called a pivot, from the list. 2) Reorder the list so that all elements which are less than the pivot come before the pivot and so that all elements greater than the pivot come after it (equal values can go either way). After this partitioning, the pivot is in its final position.

  5. Selection algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selection_algorithm

    Quickselect chooses the pivot uniformly at random from the input values. It can be described as a prune and search algorithm, [9] a variant of quicksort, with the same pivoting strategy, but where quicksort makes two recursive calls to sort the two subcollections and , quickselect only makes one of these two calls.

  6. Sorting algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorting_algorithm

    Shuffling can also be implemented by a sorting algorithm, namely by a random sort: assigning a random number to each element of the list and then sorting based on the random numbers. This is generally not done in practice, however, and there is a well-known simple and efficient algorithm for shuffling: the Fisher–Yates shuffle .

  7. Multi-key quicksort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-key_quicksort

    Multi-key quicksort, also known as three-way radix quicksort, [1] is an algorithm for sorting strings.This hybrid of quicksort and radix sort was originally suggested by P. Shackleton, as reported in one of C.A.R. Hoare's seminal papers on quicksort; [2]: 14 its modern incarnation was developed by Jon Bentley and Robert Sedgewick in the mid-1990s. [3]

  8. Quick Pick vs Picking Your Own Lotto Numbers: Is One ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/quick-pick-vs-picking-own-115700389.html

    Here's the difference between choosing your own lotto numbers versus using a random number generator.

  9. Pivotal quantity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pivotal_quantity

    Let (,) be a random variable whose distribution is the same for all . Then is called a pivotal quantity (or simply a pivot). Pivotal quantities are commonly used for normalization to allow data from different data sets to be compared. It is relatively easy to construct pivots for location and scale parameters: for the former we form differences ...