1

In the following link http://en.literateprograms.org/Quicksort_%28Python%29 the following claim is made. We make use of the pop operation to remove our chosen pivot. This has the unfortunate side effect of mutating the original list that was passed to the sort function. Why is it an unfortunate side effect? Even when I call qsort function directly below, I get the sorted list as an output given that we have the return statement.

from random import randrange       
def qsort1a(list):
    """
    Quicksort using list comprehensions and randomized pivot
    >>> qsort1a<<docstring test numeric input>>
    <<docstring test numeric output>>
    >>> qsort1a<<docstring test string input>>
    <<docstring test string output>>
    """
    def qsort(list):
        if list == []: 
            return []
        else:
            pivot = list.pop(randrange(len(list)))
            lesser = qsort([l for l in list if l < pivot])
            greater = qsort([l for l in list if l >= pivot])
            return lesser + [pivot] + greater
    return qsort(list[:])
2
  • A quick-fix for this function : ideone.com/G9Yjti Jul 12, 2013 at 4:11
  • I think the side effect is to avoid the change of the original list using pop, you have to pass a copy, and this is not memory efficient. Jul 12, 2013 at 4:16

4 Answers 4

5

You have, in effect, "fixed the bad thing" by defining your qsort1a as a wrapper around the inner qsort. Your wrapper makes a copy of the original list, using the slice operator:

return qsort(list[:])

If you remove the copy operation, making the last line read:

return qsort(list)

and then run this, you can see why it's "bad":

>>> from qsort1a import qsort1a
>>> orig = [3, 17, 4, 0, 2]
>>> qsort1a(orig)
[0, 2, 3, 4, 17]
>>> orig
[3, 17, 4, 2]
>>> 

The output is still sorted, but the original list orig has changed.

(Also, as others noted, it's generally unwise to re-use names like list as local variables, since it makes it unnecessarily difficult to access Python's built-in list function.)

1
  • YEs I know, I just copied the code from the website. I did not use the variable 'list' in my code.
    – vkaul11
    Jul 12, 2013 at 4:00
4

It is bad because you are getting a new list anyway. Why have two copies of the same list? What if you want to keep using the original unsorted list somewhere. Functions that have a return value probably should not mutate their arguments.

EDIT: I'll provide an example why mutating arguments can be confusing. In c++.

Add trivial add funciton.

int add(int a, int b)
{
   a += b;
   return a;
}

int addBad(int &a, int &b)
{
   a += b;
   return a;
}

for(int i=0;i<10;++i)
{
   for(int j=0;j<10;++j)
   {
      cout << add(i,j) << endl;
   }
}

for(int i=0;i<10;++i)
{
   for(int j=0;j<10;++j)
   {
      cout << addBad(i,j) << endl;
   }
}

Both these look so similar if the programmer doesn't know what is happening in add and addBad. And the implementations of add and addBad can be interchanged and the code will still compile. Python can be similar because passing by reference seems to happen a lot and without explicit declaration of it.

2
  • You mean you shouldn't mutate the argument that you return
    – aaronman
    Jul 12, 2013 at 3:59
  • @aaronman You really shouldn't mutate any argument you receive unless the semantics of doing so are clear to the user. One typical way to do this is to return None -- this makes it obvious that your function is a mutator rather than a pipe.
    – llb
    Jul 12, 2013 at 4:47
2

Everything works fine since your just give a copy of the argument. The bad thing is to keep the implementation simple, using pop and list comprehension, you need to pass several copies of original list. This is not as memory efficient as sort in place.

By the way, don't use list as a variable name.

1

Sometimes, you want to sort a list in-place. Sometimes, you need a sorted copy of a list (e.g., if you also want to preserve the original unsorted order). So, the Python standard library lets you write both lst.sort() and sorted(lst).

But it's unusual in Python for a function to both mutate its argument and return a value. The more common convention is Command-Query Separation, in which mutator functions return None. For example, in the list class, the append, clear, extend, remove, reverse, and sort methods, that add, remove, or reorder the items in the list, all return None.

The pop method is an exception, a case of practicality beats purity.

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