I have an unusual problem. I've been implementing Merge Sort and have encountered the following: The method works correctly except on the last pass. Given a random Integer array as input returns an Integer array where the first half and the second half are sorted separately. The merge works correctly except on the last pass. After fiddling with the debugger for a few hours I figured out that "mention point" is always evaluating to false on the last pass, even though it shouldn't based on the values.
All help is appreciated.
public static Integer[] mergeSort(Integer[] input)
{
if (input.length == 1) return input;
int splittle = input.length / 2;
Integer[] first = new Integer[splittle];
Integer[] second = new Integer[input.length - splittle];
for (int i = 0; i < splittle; i++)
first[i] = input[i];
for (int i = splittle; i < input.length; i++)
second[i - splittle] = input[i];
mergeSort(first);
mergeSort(second);
LinkedList<Integer> returner = new LinkedList<Integer>();
PriorityQueue<Integer> sFirst = new PriorityQueue<Integer>();
PriorityQueue<Integer> sSecond = new PriorityQueue<Integer>();
for (int i = 0; i < first.length; i++)
sFirst.offer(first[i]);
for (int i = 0; i < second.length; i++)
sSecond.offer(second[i]);
// while (!sFirst.isEmpty()&&!sSecond.isEmpty())
// returner.add((sFirst.peek()>=sSecond.peek() ?
// sFirst.poll():sSecond.poll()));
// expansion of line above for debugging purposes
while (!sFirst.isEmpty() && !sSecond.isEmpty())
{
int temp = 0;
if (sFirst.peek() >= sSecond.peek())
temp = sFirst.poll(); // Mention point
else
temp = sSecond.poll();
returner.add(temp);
}
while (!sFirst.isEmpty())
returner.add(sFirst.poll());
while (!sSecond.isEmpty())
returner.add(sSecond.poll());
return returner.toArray(new Integer[0]);
}
int[], and let Java deal with the autoboxing when it comes time to useLinkedListandPriorityQueue. – Matt Ball May 12 '11 at 14:59