0

My code for selection-sort

#include <stdio.h>

void selection_sort(int a[], int n);

int main()
{
    int size;

    printf("Enter the size of array: ");
    scanf("%d",&size);

    int b[size],i = 0;
    printf("Enter %d integers to be sorted: ",size);
    while(i++ < size)
        scanf("%d",&b[i]);
    selection_sort(b, size);

    printf("Sorted integers(by selection sort) are: ");
    for(int i = 0; i < size; i++)
          printf("%d",b[i]);

    return 0;       
}

void selection_sort(int a[], int n)
{   
    while(n >= 0 )
    {
        if(n == 0)
            break;
        else
        {
            int i = 0, c = 0;
            int largest = a[0];
            while(i++ < n)
                if(largest < a[i])
                {
                    c = i ;
                    largest = a[i];
                }
            int temp = a[--n];
            a[n] = largest;
            a[c] = temp;
            selection_sort(a, n);
       } 

    }

}

on sorting the array in ascending order

3    4    1    2

is giving weird output

2293388    4    3    0

I checked this many time but failed to remove the problem. What should I do to work it properly?
Algorithm used :
1. search for largest element in the array.
2. Move largest element to the last position of array.
3. Call itself recursively to sort the first n -1 element of the array.

Please don't give any other solution otherwise I will get confused.

4
  • What is the output you expect and what is weird about the output you receive? Also enough code to see how you call the function would help. If n is the size of your array then accessing a[n] is undefined behavior. Jul 1, 2013 at 17:03
  • @ShafikYaghmour OK, let me edit
    – haccks
    Jul 1, 2013 at 17:04
  • 1
    How have you "checked this"? Stepping through with a debugger would show you that there are some problems with the indexes being used (for example, the code never seems to check a[1] against largest). Even if you can't use a debugger for some reason, a couple printf()'s dumping values of interest (such as largest, i, c, n, and the array values) at each step would show you what's going wrong pretty quickly. Jul 1, 2013 at 17:56
  • @MichaelBurr; Now it is giving 4 3 0 1.
    – haccks
    Jul 1, 2013 at 18:52

2 Answers 2

1

EDIT

Ah, I see what goes wrong. First of all, while (i++ < n) does not do exactly what you expect it to do. It checks if the condition i < n is true, then it increments i. However, it seems that after the conditional check, i is already incremented in the body. So for example,

while (i++ < n)
   printf ("%d ", i);

will print out (with n=4):

1 2 3 4

So you first need to change that. Secondly, the outer while-loop is not at all necessary. Using one loop will suffice. Again, change the while loop in here to while (i < n) and increment i in the body. SO the final code will be:

#include <stdio.h>

void selection_sort(int a[], int n);

int main()
{
    int size;

    printf("Enter the size of array: ");
    scanf("%d", &size);

    int b[size], i = 0;
    printf("Enter %d integers to be sorted: ", size);
    while(i < size) {
        scanf("%d", &b[i]);
        i++;
    }

    selection_sort(b, size);

    printf("Sorted integers(by selection sort) are: ");
    i = 0;
    for(i = 0; i < size; i++)
          printf("%d ", b[i]);

    printf ("\n");
    return 0;       
}

void selection_sort(int a[], int n)
{   
    if(n == 0)
        return;
    else
    {
        int i = 0, c = 0;
        int largest = a[0];
        while(i < n) {
            if(largest < a[i])
            {
                c = i;
                largest = a[i];
            }
            i++;
        }

        int temp = a[--n];
        a[n] = a[c];
        a[c] = temp;
        selection_sort(a, n);
    } 
}

I tested this with your given input (3 4 1 2) and it prints out a sorted list: 1 2 3 4.

2
  • It is giving the output 0 1 2 3
    – haccks
    Jul 1, 2013 at 18:07
  • Then I am curious what your arguments for the function are and how you print out the array elements.
    – d01berg
    Jul 1, 2013 at 18:14
1

Whenever you see such weird big numbers, its usually an array out of bounds issue. Please take a small data-set, say 5-6 numbers, and walk through your program. I am sure you can fix it. Good luck!!

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.