I understand the difference between the Big-O and the little-o, however I wonder when/why one would choose the little-o over the big-O for a particular situation (and the opposite).
1 Answer
You can chose to describe an algorithm or requirement using little-o notation when you want to emphasize the difference from big O, or if you want to ensure "something is better than..."
A naive example - if you need a 3rd party to create some library for you, and you want to ensure the query time is sublinear, the mathematical notation for sublinear will be o(n)
, where o(.)
is the little o notation.