Notice that none of the numbers nearby are even close. =) Sorry Tiger. No hard feelings right? I'd like to sleep tonight with my head among the leaves.
FYI a radix sort is more than two times as fast sorting a vector<int> filled with both std::rand(), as well as std::rand() % 100 in the range 200k elements to 4M elements than std::sort.
@thecoshman, it's the same code. i'm using MSVC'10 and the order some functions are being called inside a loop make the results to be changed. is there a way to force that the functions are called sequentially?
@CaptainGiraffe, my program is in c++, i'm using MSVC'10. when i run the code in debug mode, everything's smooth and the results are fine. i noticed that the problem appears, when the sequence how some functions are being called, get changed
@Tin you are writing bad code that is relying on debug information. Please stop trying to get help here, this is not a trivial thing that can be fixed in chat. Do the decent thing and post a question on Stack Overflow.
And last time I met with sbi (a couple of weeks ago) everyone talked in German. Well, until I wanted to say something C++ related and it just wouldn't work.
One of the newer features we have in our toolbelt is the ability to lock questions in a sort of wiki state, where no new answers can be added, but existing answers can be improved. You'll see its usage most recently here:
Best C/C++ Network Library?
This question has a few things that keep...
Quoting this question on SO (Spoiler alert!):
This question has been asked in an Oracle interview.
How would you divide a number by 3 without using *, /, +, -, %,
operators?
The number may be signed or unsigned.
The task is solvable, but see if you can write the shortest code.
...
C, 167503724710
Here's my solution to the problem. I admit it is unlikely to win a strict code golf competition, but it doesn't use any tricks to indirectly call built-in division functionality, it is written in portable C (as the original Stack Overflow question asked for), it works perfectly f...