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What is the most efficient way to sort a list, [0,0,1,0,1,1,0] whose elements are only 0 & 1, without using any builtin sort() or sorted() or count() function. O(n) or less than that

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10 Answers 10

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>>> lst = [0,0,1,0,1,1,0]
>>> l, s = len(lst), sum(lst)
>>> result = [0] * (l - s) + [1] * s
>>> result
[0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1]
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There are many different general sorting algorithms that can be used. However, in this case, the most important consideration is that all the elements to sort belong to the set (0,1).

As other contributors answered there is a trivial implementation.

def radix_sort(a):
    slist = [[],[]]
    for elem in a:
        slist[elem].append(elem)
    return slist[0] + slist[1]

print radix_sort([0,0,1,0,1,1,0])

It must be noted that this is a particular implementation of the Radix sort. And this can be extended easily if the elements of the list to be sorted belong to a defined limited set.

def radix_sort(a, elems):
    slist = {}
    for elem in elems:
        slist[elem] = []
    for elem in a:
        slist[elem].append(elem)
    nslist = []
    for elem in elems:
        nslist += slist[elem]
    return nslist

print radix_sort([2,0,0,1,3,0,1,1,0],[0,1,2,3])

No sort() or sorted() or count() function. O(n)

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    Please, don't shade the builtin functions or data types (id and set in your case) Jun 24, 2012 at 10:53
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This one is O(n) (you can't get less):

old = [0,0,1,0,1,1,0]
zeroes = old.count(0) #you gotta count them somehow!
new = [0]*zeroes + [1]*(len(old) - zeroes)

As there are no Python loops, this may be the faster you can get in pure Python...

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  • 1
    count_of_ones = sum(old) :) Jun 24, 2012 at 7:23
  • 1
    .count() is 15% faster (for me). Use the timeit module and see for yourself.
    – Blender
    Jun 24, 2012 at 7:25
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    @Blender that's what I was going to say :)
    – JBernardo
    Jun 24, 2012 at 7:25
  • Tested this solution as well as all the others. It's currently the fastest.
    – Blender
    Jun 24, 2012 at 7:32
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    @Blender, [0,1] * 10000 = [0,1,0,1,0,1....]. This syntax safe if the list contains only immutable objects (like 1 and 0) :) Jun 24, 2012 at 7:46
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def sort_arr_with_zero_one():

  main_list = [0,0,1,0,1,1,0]
  zero_list = []
  one_list = []
  for i in main_list:
    if i:
        one_list.append(i)
    else:
        zero_list.append(i)

  return zero_list + one_list
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    I selected astynax's answer as the one since it has more vote. But i was able to understand yours much easily than any others. And even you didn't use sort , sorted or count. and i think its o(n) too. Thanks for the answer Jun 24, 2012 at 12:42
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You have only two values, so you know in advance the precise structure of the output: it will be divided into two regions of varying lengths.

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I'd try this:

b = [0,0,1,0,1,1,0]

def odd_sort(a):
  zeroes = a.count(0)

  return [0 for i in xrange(zeroes)] + [1 for i in xrange(len(a) - zeroes)]
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You could walk the list with two pointers, one from the start (i) and from the end (j), and compare the values one by one and swap them if necessary:

def sort_binary_values(l):
    i, j = 0, len(l)-1
    while i < j:
        # skip 0 values from the begin
        while i < j and l[i] == 0:
            i = i+1
        if i >= j: break
        # skip 1 values from the end
        while i < j and l[j] == 1:
            j = j-1
        if i >= j: break
        # since all in sequence values have been skipped and i and j did not reach each other
        # we encountered a pair that is out of order and needs to be swapped
        l[i], l[j] = l[j], l[i]
        j = j-1
        i = i+1
    return l
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I like the answer by JBernado, but will throw in another monstrous option (although I've not done any profiling on it - it's not particulary extensible as it relies on the order of a dictionary hash, but works for 0 and 1):

from itertools import chain, repeat
from collections import Counter

list(chain.from_iterable(map(repeat, *zip(*Counter(bits).items()))))

Or - slightly less convoluted...

from itertools import repeat, chain, islice, ifilter
from operator import not_

list(islice(chain(ifilter(not_, bits), repeat(1)), len(bits)))

This should keep everything at the C level - so it should be fairly optimal.

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  • It's worth noting that the first code block will work with any ints (at least in CPython where hash(int) == int), but the second is purely 0/1 Jun 24, 2012 at 11:20
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All you need to know is how long the original sequence is and how many ones are in it.

old = [0,0,1,0,1,1,0]
ones = sum(1 for b in old if b)
new = [0]*(len(old)-ones) + [1]*ones
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  • Do you really want to be generating a list to get its length. It may be better written as sum(1 for i in old if i) Jun 24, 2012 at 10:40
  • @Jon Clements: Yeah, that's even better. Answer updated -- thanks.
    – martineau
    Jun 24, 2012 at 16:02
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Here is a Python solution in O(n) time and O(2) space.

Absolutely no need to create new lists and best time performance

def sort01(arr):
  i = 0
  j = len(arr)-1
  while i < j:
    while arr[i] == 0:
      i += 1
    while arr[j] == 1:
      j -= 1
    if i<j:
      arr[i] = 0
      arr[j] = 1
  return arr

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