22:59
so, if(isIncreasing(s, i)) return true
and isIncreasing(a, x) { for( ... ) { if(++i === x) continue; if(prev >= (prev=a[i])) return false; } ... }
also, make sure to define prev locally, as setting global variables is also very bad for performance
not sure if you need to put the ++i at the beginning or at the end there, mess around with it
that's going to give you a huge perf boost, I think, as it gets rid of array manipulation
also, at this point for...of might be faster if you decide not to care about the index, but you totally should
function almostIncreasingSequence(sequence) {
function isIncreasing(a, x){
for (let i = 0, prev=a[0]; i < a.length;){
if (i === x) continue;
if (prev >= (prev=a[++i])) return false;
}
return true;
}
let bad = 0, s = sequence;
for (let i = 0, l = s.length; i < l; ++i){
if (isIncreasing(s, i)) return true;
}
return false;
}
also, nvm, you are locally defining prev
the above should be a lot faster though, check and tell
you can actually probably do a minor other optimization
merge the 2 top ifs: if(i === x && ...) return false;
if you have some knowledge about what the numbers are, you might be able to hint it to the engine and help it optimize
for example, if you know everything in the array is an integer between (-2**31, 2**31)
, you might be able to speed it up somewhere else in your code, by adding |0
to the pushed numbers. I'm not exactly sure how consistent it is or if it's even valid. Give it a try by mapping that through the array before running the tests
is bad
just a leftover thing?
not that it will change the execution time by almost anything
function almostIncreasingSequence(sequence) {
const isIncreasing = (a, x) => {
for (let i = 0, prev=a[0]; i < a.length;){
if (i === x && prev >= (prev=a[++i])) return false;
}
return true;
}
for (let i = 0, l = sequence.length; i < l; ++i){
if (isIncreasing(sequence, i)) return true;
}
return false;
}
only case where I see that not working is if i = 0
on the second loop, which is pretty important
doing a single check, so prev=a[x === 0 ? 1 : 0]
should fix that
don't be shy in defining things where you should, making the code smaller really doesn't make it any easier for the engines. You probably don't even save more than a couple microseconds. #throwingnumberswithoutresearch
obligatory shoutout to 4. Great number