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  2. Sorting algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorting_algorithm

    This is a linear-time, analog algorithm for sorting a sequence of items, requiring O(n) stack space, and the sort is stable. This requires n parallel processors. See spaghetti sort#Analysis. Sorting network: Varies: Varies: Varies: Varies: Varies (stable sorting networks require more comparisons) Yes

  3. Timsort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timsort

    Timsort is a stable sorting algorithm (order of elements with same key is kept) and strives to perform balanced merges (a merge thus merges runs of similar sizes). In order to achieve sorting stability, only consecutive runs are merged. Between two non-consecutive runs, there can be an element with the same key inside the runs.

  4. X + Y sorting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_+_Y_sorting

    For the classical comparison sorting problem, the time to sort and the number of comparisons needed to sort are within constant factors of each other. But for X + Y {\displaystyle X+Y} sorting, the number of comparisons is smaller than the best time bound known: Michael Fredman showed in 1976 that X + Y {\displaystyle X+Y} sorting can be done ...

  5. Sorting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorting

    For example, addresses could be sorted using the city as primary sort key, and the street as secondary sort key. If the sort key values are totally ordered, the sort key defines a weak order of the items: items with the same sort key are equivalent with respect to sorting. See also stable sorting. If different items have different sort key ...

  6. Integer sorting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integer_sorting

    Time bounds for integer sorting algorithms typically depend on three parameters: the number n of data values to be sorted, the magnitude K of the largest possible key to be sorted, and the number w of bits that can be represented in a single machine word of the computer on which the algorithm is to be performed.

  7. Comparison sort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_sort

    Sorting a set of unlabelled weights by weight using only a balance scale requires a comparison sort algorithm. A comparison sort is a type of sorting algorithm that only reads the list elements through a single abstract comparison operation (often a "less than or equal to" operator or a three-way comparison) that determines which of two elements should occur first in the final sorted list.

  8. Quicksort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quicksort

    Merge sort is also the algorithm of choice for external sorting of very large data sets stored on slow-to-access media such as disk storage or network-attached storage. Bucket sort with two buckets is very similar to quicksort; the pivot in this case is effectively the value in the middle of the value range, which does well on average for ...

  9. Pigeonhole sort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigeonhole_sort

    It requires O(n + N) time. It is similar to counting sort, but differs in that it "moves items twice: once to the bucket array and again to the final destination [whereas] counting sort builds an auxiliary array then uses the array to compute each item's final destination and move the item there." [2] The pigeonhole algorithm works as follows: