@Rick A heap sort starts by building a heap from the previously-unsorted items. Then you grab the root from the heap, and swapping it with the last item in the heap. Then you have a one-smaller heap with a root that needs to be sifted back in correctly. Since it's getting moved to the end of the memory formerly occupied by the heap, if you do a max-heap, each time you swap one to the end, you're getting the largest one in the heap. Writing them at decreasing addresses ends up sorted.