Difference between revisions of "PGsort"
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'''Examples''' |
'''Examples''' |
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− | <blockquote> join(" ",PGsort( sub {$_[0] < $_[1]} , (23,2,10,11,11,31) ); returns "2 10 11 11 23 31"</blockquote> |
+ | <blockquote> join(" ",PGsort( sub {$_[0] < $_[1]} , (23,2,10,11,11,31) ); returns "2 10 11 11 23 31"</blockquote> |
<blockquote> PGsort (sub { ($_[0] % 2) < ($_[1] % 2) }, @L ); will move the even numbers to the left of the odd numbers.</blockquote> |
<blockquote> PGsort (sub { ($_[0] % 2) < ($_[1] % 2) }, @L ); will move the even numbers to the left of the odd numbers.</blockquote> |
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<blockquote> PGsort( <br /> |
<blockquote> PGsort( <br /> |
Revision as of 01:37, 5 January 2014
PGSort
Description
General sorting macro
Syntax
PGsort( &sort_subroutine, @list);
Params
&sort_subroutine is a subroutine of two variables which defines order. Its output must be 0 or 1, with a 1 indicating the first argument is less than the second.
@list is the list to be sorted.
Returns
Returns list of elements in @list, ignoring duplicates. The order is unspecified.
Examples
join(" ",PGsort( sub {$_[0] < $_[1]} , (23,2,10,11,11,31) ); returns "2 10 11 11 23 31"
PGsort (sub { ($_[0] % 2) < ($_[1] % 2) }, @L ); will move the even numbers to the left of the odd numbers.
PGsort(
sub { my ($P1, $P2) = @_; my $P1x = $P1 ->{data}[0], $P2x = $P2 -> {data}[0]; if ($P1x < $P2x) { return 1; }
if ($P1x > $P2x) { return 0; } $P1 ->{data}[1] < $P2 -> {data}[1]; }
, ( Point (2,2), Point (1,3), Point(2,1) ) )
returns (Point (1,3), Point (2,1), Point (2,2)) (now in lexigraphical order)
Notes
Using the perl sort directly in problems is not allowed for two reasons. The first is that the hardwired $a and $b variables used by sort can interfere with other values assigned to $a and $b. The second is that it is pretty easy to create closed loops with sort that hang the program. Currently nothing is done to prevent this, but later we may wish to modify num_sort and lex_sort to catch this problem.