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nth_element

Category: algorithms Component type: function

Prototype

Nth_element is an overloaded name; there are actually two nth_element functions.
template <class RandomAccessIterator>
void nth_element(RandomAccessIterator first, RandomAccessIterator nth,
                 RandomAccessIterator last);

template <class RandomAccessIterator, class StrictWeakOrdering>
void nth_element(RandomAccessIterator first, RandomAccessIterator nth,
                 RandomAccessIterator last, StrictWeakOrdering comp);

Description

Nth_element is similar to partial_sort, in that it partially orders a range of elements: it arranges the range [first, last) such that the element pointed to by the iterator nth is the same as the element that would be in that position if the entire range [first, last) had been sorted. Additionally, none of the elements in the range [nth, last) is less than any of the elements in the range [first, nth). [1]

The two versions of nth_element differ in how they define whether one element is less than another. The first version compares objects using operator<, and the second compares objects using a function object comp.

The postcondition for the first version of nth_element is as follows. There exists no iterator i in the range [first, nth) such that *nth < *i, and there exists no iterator j in the range [nth + 1, last) such that *j < *nth.

The postcondition for the second version of nth_element is as follows. There exists no iterator i in the range [first, nth) such that comp(*nth, *i) is true, and there exists no iterator j in the range [nth + 1, last) such that comp(*j, *nth) is true.

Definition

Defined in the standard header algorithm, and in the nonstandard backward-compatibility header algo.h.

Requirements on types

For the first version, the one that takes three arguments: For the second version, the one that takes four arguments:

Preconditions

(It follows from these two conditions that [first, last) is a valid range.)

Complexity

On average, linear in last - first. [2]

Example

int A[] = {7, 2, 6, 11, 9, 3, 12, 10, 8, 4, 1, 5};
const int N = sizeof(A) / sizeof(int);

nth_element(A, A + 6, A + N);
copy(A, A + N, ostream_iterator<int>(cout, " "));
// The printed result is "5 2 6 1 4 3 7 8 9 10 11 12".

Notes

[1] The way in which this differs from partial_sort is that neither the range [first, nth) nor the range [nth, last) is be sorted: it is simply guaranteed that none of the elements in [nth, last) is less than any of the elements in [first, nth). In that sense, nth_element is more similar to partition than to sort. Nth_element does less work than partial_sort, so, reasonably enough, it is faster. That's the main reason to use nth_element instead of partial_sort.

[2] Note that this is significantly less than the run-time complexity of partial_sort.

See also

partial_sort, partition, sort, StrictWeakOrdering, LessThan Comparable


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