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Quicksort is an efficient, general-purpose sorting algorithm. Quicksort was developed by British computer scientist Tony Hoare in 1959 [1] and published in 1961. [2] It is still a commonly used algorithm for sorting. Overall, it is slightly faster than merge sort and heapsort for randomized data, particularly on larger distributions. [3]
Efficient implementations of quicksort (with in-place partitioning) are typically unstable sorts and somewhat complex but are among the fastest sorting algorithms in practice. Together with its modest O(log n) space usage, quicksort is one of the most popular sorting algorithms and is available in many standard programming libraries.
Quicksort can actually be done in O(n log n) time worst case, by carefully choosing the pivot - the algorithm to do so is a bit complex though.
While the Quick Sort article gives people the view of the quick sort algorithm, we can update some new findings to it to make it stay up to the new research. For example, when changing the pick of pivots will improve the worst case of time complexity from O(N^2) to O(NlogN). MiaoQiQi 20:55, 14 March 2023 (UTC)
Quicksort requires n 2 comparisons in the worst case; would we then say that quicksort is Ω(n 2)? It's true in the worst case, but it doesn't seem right to me. I don't like putting quantification monikers on order statistics that have lower and upper bounds built into them.
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qsort is a C standard library function that implements a sorting algorithm for arrays of arbitrary objects according to a user-provided comparison function. It is named after the "quicker sort" algorithm [1] (a quicksort variant due to R. S. Scowen), which was originally used to implement it in the Unix C library, although the C standard does not require it to implement quicksort.