Fromg Google's Python Class:
E. Given two lists sorted in increasing order, create and return a merged
list of all the elements in sorted order. You may modify the passed in lists.
Ideally, the solution should work in "linear" time, making a single
pass of both lists.
Here's my solution:
def linear_merge(list1, list2):
merged_list = []
i = 0
j = 0
while True:
if i == len(list1):
return merged_list + list2[j:]
if j == len(list2):
return merged_list + list1[i:]
if list1[i] <= list2[j]:
merged_list.append(list1[i])
i += 1
else:
merged_list.append(list2[j])
j += 1
First of all, is it okay to use an infinite loop here? Should I break out of the loop using the break keyword when I'm done merging the list, or are the returns okay here?
I've seen similar questions asked here, and all the solutions look quite similar to mine, i.e. very C-like. Is there no more python-like solution? Or is this because of the nature of the algorithm?