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here is one from wikibooks (This is Least Significant Digit based)

public void RadixSort(int[] a)
{  
        // our helper array 
	int[] t=new int[a.Length]; 

	// number of bits our group will be long 
	int r=4; // try to set this also to 2, 8 or 16 to see if it is 
                     //quicker or not 

	// number of bits of a C# int 
	int b=32; 

	// counting and prefix arrays
	// (note dimensions 2^r which is the number of all possible values of a 
            //r-bit number) 
	int[] count=new int[1<<r]; 
	int[] pref=new int[1<<r]; 

	// number of groups 
	int groups=(int)Math.Ceiling((double)b/(double)r); 

	// the mask to identify groups 
	int mask = (1<<r)-1; 

	// the algorithm: 
	for (int c=0, shift=0; c<groups; c++, shift+=r)
	{ 
		// reset count array 
		for (int j=0; j<count.Length; j++)
			count[j]=0;

		// counting elements of the c-th group 
		for (int i=0; i<a.Length; i++)
			count[(a[i]>>shift)&mask]++; 

		// calculating prefixes 
		pref[0]=0; 
		for (int i=1; i<count.Length; i++)
			pref[i]=pref[i-1]+count[i-1]; 

		// from a[] to t[] elements ordered by c-th group 
		for (int i=0; i<a.Length; i++)
			t[pref[(a[i]>>shift)&mask]++]=a[i]; 

		// a[]=t[] and start again until the last group 
		t.CopyTo(a,0); 
	} 
	// a is sorted 
}
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Great article here.

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