As I wrote in some of my last posts I am still quite new to the c# world so it comes that I wrote small benchmark to compare Dictionary, Hashtable, SortedList and SortedDictionary against each other. The test runs with 8000 iterations and from 50 to 100000 elements. I tested adding of new elements, search for elements and looping through some elements all random. The results was as I expected them to be except the result of the SortedDictionary which was much confusing for me... It was just slow in all results. So did I missing sometging about the concept of a sorted dictionary. I already asked google but All that I found out was that others had come to the same test result. Slightly different based on their implementation of the test. Again my question: why is the SortedDicrionary so much slower than all the others?
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A SortedDictionary is implemented as a binary tree. Therefore, accessing an element is O(lg(n)). A Dictionary is a hash table, and has a complexity of O(1) for access. A SortedDictionary is quite useful when you need the data to be sorted (a Dictionary has no defined order). Dictionary is appropriate for most cases. | |||
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The answer is simply that you would use the Remember that eventhough it ended up as slowest in your tests, it's still not slow. If you need exactly what the | |||
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Etienne already gave the technical answer before, but to add a more 'plain' remark: I'd guess that the "Sorted" bit part of a SortedDictionary puts some overhead on inserts and even retrieving items as it seems from Etienne's answer. However, in a real app a SortedDictionary can probably provide considerable performance or 'perceived performance' increase if you need an "already sorted dictionary" at some time in your app. Hope that helps. | |||
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