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I want to implement this quicksort algorithm with some different pivot strategy but there is some logical error in it. Can you please help me find it?

#include <iostream.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
#include<stdio.h>
#include<conio.h>
int arr[100],i,pivot,left,right,sum=0,a,n=10;

int partition();
void quickSort(int* ,int ,int );



void main()
{
    clrscr();
    int i,n=20;
    for(i=0;i<=n;i++)
    {
      arr[i]=rand()%100;
    }

    for(i=0;i<=n;i++)
    {
      cout<<"\t"<<arr[i];
    }

    quickSort(arr,n,i);

    for(i=1;i<n;i++)
    {
      cout<<"\n"<<arr[i];
    }

    getch();
}

int partition()
{
  // int i;
  // int sum=0;
  // int pivot;
  // stable_sort(arr,arr+3);
    for(i=0;i<5;i++)
    {
       cout<<"\nsorted k elements\t"<<arr[i];
       // sum=sum+arr[i];
    }
    // cout<<sum;
    //cout<<"median is "<<sum/3;
    pivot=arr[(i)/2];
    cout<<"pivotis value at position "<<pivot ;
    return pivot;
}

void quickSort(int arr[],int left,int right) 
{
      partition();
      right=n,left=0;
      int i = right, j =left;

      int tmp;
      int p=pivot;
      cout<<" m array of p"<<p;
      while (i <= j) {
        while (arr[i] < p)
          i++;
        while (arr[j] > p)
          j--;
        if (i <= j) {
          tmp = arr[i];
          arr[i] = arr[j];
          arr[j] = tmp;
          i++;
          j--;
        }
    }
    if (left < j)
    {
       quickSort(arr, left, j);
    }
    if (i < right)
    {
       quickSort(arr, i, right);
    }
}
4
  • 2
    How do you know you have a logical error? Can you provide the result for a small sample input data set? Apr 13, 2011 at 13:57
  • 1
    The title 'NO IDEA WATS THE PROBLEM' wasn't helping you, so I, err-- polished it. Did you try debugging this? Locating the error?
    – salezica
    Apr 13, 2011 at 13:58
  • I is not declared in partition Apr 13, 2011 at 14:05
  • You've requested help finding "the error." The more I look at this code, the more I'm convinced the error is all of it. Don't try to fix this code. Scrap it and start over using code that you know works. Once you've confirmed for yourself that it works, then start experimenting. Make a change and see whether it still works. If it doesn't, undo that change and try something else. Apr 13, 2011 at 14:51

2 Answers 2

3

Your pivot value will always be the value of arr[(i)/2], which is arr[2], no matter which portion of the array you happen to be sorting at the time. Pass the values of left and right to partition so it knows which values to consider for the current call to quickSort.

Also, the values of left and right that you pass for the initial call to quickSort are 20 and 21, respectively, which surely isn't what you intended. You have an array of length 100, and you have initialized the first 21 elements, so you probably want to pass 0 and 21 for those parameters.

But the first thing you should probably do, if you want to test quicksort with a different pivot strategy, is to get it working first with a typical pivot strategy, like the one demonstrated in your textbook. Start with a working implementation, and only then should you start experimenting with variations. You should be able to find a working implementation in your textbook or your class notes.

2
  • thanks. but can you just tell me whether i have passed the values(function parameters) correctly between the different functions. or when calling those functions?? Apr 13, 2011 at 14:22
  • The only place you're passing values to anything is when you call quickSort. I've already told you you're passing the wrong values on the first call. If you were calculating i and j correctly, then I think the recursive calls might be OK, but you're not. (j starts out equal to left, and all you ever do to it afterward is decrement it; when you do expect it will ever be greater then left?) You're not passing any values to partition, and that's one of the many problems in this code. Apr 13, 2011 at 14:45
2

I didn't find any place you compare values from the array.

I suppose you should check this place:

    if (i <= j) {
      tmp = arr[i];
      arr[i] = arr[j];
      arr[j] = tmp;
      i++;
      j--;
    }

Probably it should be:

    if (arr[i] < arr[j]) {
      tmp = arr[i];
      arr[i] = arr[j];
      arr[j] = tmp;
      i++;
      j--;
    }

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