This package is a collection of extra primitives related to sorting. Currently it has only two functions:
These functions allows to quickly re-sort a previously sorted slice, which has few unsorted elements appended. Appended
works pretty well if the tail is small, but limitations of the in-place algorithm makes it ineffective is the tail is comparable by size with the total size of the slice. While AppendedWithBuf
is effective with
As one may see resorting 100 items in a slice of length 1048576 using AppendedWithBuf
is almost 100 times more effective than just full resorting using sort.Slice
or sort.Sort
. But if the amount of unsorted items is too high then it might be less effective. So for convenience to automatically avoid spending more time than simple through Sort
/Slice
these functions has heuristic fallback logic for big tails, so the actual performance for a slice of size 1048576 looks like here:
But using of these functions does not make sense if tailLenght
always equals to len(s)
.
P.S.: Also for comparison here is performance for a slice of size 256:
In-place:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
"github.com/go-ng/xsort"
)
func main() {
s := sort.IntSlice{-4, -2, 1, 3, 4, 5, 9}
s = append(s, 2, -3)
xsort.Appended(s, 2)
fmt.Println(s) // output: [-4 -3 -2 1 2 3 4 5 9]
}
With buffer (faster):
package main
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
"github.com/go-ng/xsort"
)
func main() {
s := sort.IntSlice{-4, -2, 1, 3, 4, 5, 9}
a := []int{2, -3}
s = append(s, a...)
xsort.AppendedWithBuf(s, a)
fmt.Println(s) // output: [-4 -3 -2 1 2 3 4 5 9]
}