xref: /freebsd/lib/libc/stdlib/qsort.3 (revision 4f52dfbb)
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32.\"     @(#)qsort.3	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/4/93
33.\" $FreeBSD$
34.\"
35.Dd February 20, 2013
36.Dt QSORT 3
37.Os
38.Sh NAME
39.Nm qsort ,
40.Nm qsort_b ,
41.Nm qsort_r ,
42.Nm heapsort ,
43.Nm heapsort_b ,
44.Nm mergesort ,
45.Nm mergesort_b
46.Nd sort functions
47.Sh LIBRARY
48.Lb libc
49.Sh SYNOPSIS
50.In stdlib.h
51.Ft void
52.Fo qsort
53.Fa "void *base"
54.Fa "size_t nmemb"
55.Fa "size_t size"
56.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
57.Fc
58.Ft void
59.Fo qsort_b
60.Fa "void *base"
61.Fa "size_t nmemb"
62.Fa "size_t size"
63.Fa "int \*[lp]^compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
64.Fc
65.Ft void
66.Fo qsort_r
67.Fa "void *base"
68.Fa "size_t nmemb"
69.Fa "size_t size"
70.Fa "void *thunk"
71.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]void *, const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
72.Fc
73.Ft int
74.Fo heapsort
75.Fa "void *base"
76.Fa "size_t nmemb"
77.Fa "size_t size"
78.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
79.Fc
80.Ft int
81.Fo heapsort_b
82.Fa "void *base"
83.Fa "size_t nmemb"
84.Fa "size_t size"
85.Fa "int \*[lp]^compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
86.Fc
87.Ft int
88.Fo mergesort
89.Fa "void *base"
90.Fa "size_t nmemb"
91.Fa "size_t size"
92.Fa "int \*[lp]*compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
93.Fc
94.Ft int
95.Fo mergesort_b
96.Fa "void *base"
97.Fa "size_t nmemb"
98.Fa "size_t size"
99.Fa "int \*[lp]^compar\*[rp]\*[lp]const void *, const void *\*[rp]"
100.Fc
101.Sh DESCRIPTION
102The
103.Fn qsort
104function is a modified partition-exchange sort, or quicksort.
105The
106.Fn heapsort
107function is a modified selection sort.
108The
109.Fn mergesort
110function is a modified merge sort with exponential search
111intended for sorting data with pre-existing order.
112.Pp
113The
114.Fn qsort
115and
116.Fn heapsort
117functions sort an array of
118.Fa nmemb
119objects, the initial member of which is pointed to by
120.Fa base .
121The size of each object is specified by
122.Fa size .
123The
124.Fn mergesort
125function
126behaves similarly, but
127.Em requires
128that
129.Fa size
130be greater than
131.Dq "sizeof(void *) / 2" .
132.Pp
133The contents of the array
134.Fa base
135are sorted in ascending order according to
136a comparison function pointed to by
137.Fa compar ,
138which requires two arguments pointing to the objects being
139compared.
140.Pp
141The comparison function must return an integer less than, equal to, or
142greater than zero if the first argument is considered to be respectively
143less than, equal to, or greater than the second.
144.Pp
145The
146.Fn qsort_r
147function behaves identically to
148.Fn qsort ,
149except that it takes an additional argument,
150.Fa thunk ,
151which is passed unchanged as the first argument to function pointed to
152.Fa compar .
153This allows the comparison function to access additional
154data without using global variables, and thus
155.Fn qsort_r
156is suitable for use in functions which must be reentrant.
157The
158.Fn qsort_b
159function behaves identically to
160.Fn qsort ,
161except that it takes a block, rather than a function pointer.
162.Pp
163The algorithms implemented by
164.Fn qsort ,
165.Fn qsort_r ,
166and
167.Fn heapsort
168are
169.Em not
170stable, that is, if two members compare as equal, their order in
171the sorted array is undefined.
172The
173.Fn heapsort_b
174function behaves identically to
175.Fn heapsort ,
176except that it takes a block, rather than a function pointer.
177The
178.Fn mergesort
179algorithm is stable.
180The
181.Fn mergesort_b
182function behaves identically to
183.Fn mergesort ,
184except that it takes a block, rather than a function pointer.
185.Pp
186The
187.Fn qsort
188and
189.Fn qsort_r
190functions are an implementation of C.A.R.
191Hoare's
192.Dq quicksort
193algorithm,
194a variant of partition-exchange sorting; in particular, see
195.An D.E. Knuth Ns 's
196.%T "Algorithm Q" .
197.Sy Quicksort
198takes O N lg N average time.
199This implementation uses median selection to avoid its
200O N**2 worst-case behavior.
201.Pp
202The
203.Fn heapsort
204function is an implementation of
205.An "J.W.J. William" Ns 's
206.Dq heapsort
207algorithm,
208a variant of selection sorting; in particular, see
209.An "D.E. Knuth" Ns 's
210.%T "Algorithm H" .
211.Sy Heapsort
212takes O N lg N worst-case time.
213Its
214.Em only
215advantage over
216.Fn qsort
217is that it uses almost no additional memory; while
218.Fn qsort
219does not allocate memory, it is implemented using recursion.
220.Pp
221The function
222.Fn mergesort
223requires additional memory of size
224.Fa nmemb *
225.Fa size
226bytes; it should be used only when space is not at a premium.
227The
228.Fn mergesort
229function
230is optimized for data with pre-existing order; its worst case
231time is O N lg N; its best case is O N.
232.Pp
233Normally,
234.Fn qsort
235is faster than
236.Fn mergesort
237is faster than
238.Fn heapsort .
239Memory availability and pre-existing order in the data can make this
240untrue.
241.Sh RETURN VALUES
242The
243.Fn qsort
244and
245.Fn qsort_r
246functions
247return no value.
248.Pp
249.Rv -std heapsort mergesort
250.Sh EXAMPLES
251A sample program that sorts an array of
252.Vt int
253values in place using
254.Fn qsort ,
255and then prints the sorted array to standard output is:
256.Bd -literal
257#include <stdio.h>
258#include <stdlib.h>
259
260/*
261 * Custom comparison function that compares 'int' values through pointers
262 * passed by qsort(3).
263 */
264static int
265int_compare(const void *p1, const void *p2)
266{
267	int left = *(const int *)p1;
268	int right = *(const int *)p2;
269
270	return ((left > right) - (left < right));
271}
272
273/*
274 * Sort an array of 'int' values and print it to standard output.
275 */
276int
277main(void)
278{
279	int int_array[] = { 4, 5, 9, 3, 0, 1, 7, 2, 8, 6 };
280	size_t array_size = sizeof(int_array) / sizeof(int_array[0]);
281	size_t k;
282
283	qsort(&int_array, array_size, sizeof(int_array[0]), int_compare);
284	for (k = 0; k < array_size; k++)
285		printf(" %d", int_array[k]);
286	puts("");
287	return (EXIT_SUCCESS);
288}
289.Ed
290.Sh COMPATIBILITY
291Previous versions of
292.Fn qsort
293did not permit the comparison routine itself to call
294.Fn qsort 3 .
295This is no longer true.
296.Sh ERRORS
297The
298.Fn heapsort
299and
300.Fn mergesort
301functions succeed unless:
302.Bl -tag -width Er
303.It Bq Er EINVAL
304The
305.Fa size
306argument is zero, or,
307the
308.Fa size
309argument to
310.Fn mergesort
311is less than
312.Dq "sizeof(void *) / 2" .
313.It Bq Er ENOMEM
314The
315.Fn heapsort
316or
317.Fn mergesort
318functions
319were unable to allocate memory.
320.El
321.Sh SEE ALSO
322.Xr sort 1 ,
323.Xr radixsort 3
324.Rs
325.%A Hoare, C.A.R.
326.%D 1962
327.%T "Quicksort"
328.%J "The Computer Journal"
329.%V 5:1
330.%P pp. 10-15
331.Re
332.Rs
333.%A Williams, J.W.J
334.%D 1964
335.%T "Heapsort"
336.%J "Communications of the ACM"
337.%V 7:1
338.%P pp. 347-348
339.Re
340.Rs
341.%A Knuth, D.E.
342.%D 1968
343.%B "The Art of Computer Programming"
344.%V Vol. 3
345.%T "Sorting and Searching"
346.%P pp. 114-123, 145-149
347.Re
348.Rs
349.%A McIlroy, P.M.
350.%T "Optimistic Sorting and Information Theoretic Complexity"
351.%J "Fourth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms"
352.%V January 1992
353.Re
354.Rs
355.%A Bentley, J.L.
356.%A McIlroy, M.D.
357.%T "Engineering a Sort Function"
358.%J "Software--Practice and Experience"
359.%V Vol. 23(11)
360.%P pp. 1249-1265
361.%D November\ 1993
362.Re
363.Sh STANDARDS
364The
365.Fn qsort
366function
367conforms to
368.St -isoC .
369.Sh HISTORY
370The variants of these functions that take blocks as arguments first appeared in
371Mac OS X.
372This implementation was created by David Chisnall.
373