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Swift Data Structure and Algorithms

You're reading from   Swift Data Structure and Algorithms Implement Swift structures and algorithms natively

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785884504
Length 286 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Mario Eguiluz Alebicto Mario Eguiluz Alebicto
Author Profile Icon Mario Eguiluz Alebicto
Mario Eguiluz Alebicto
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Walking Across the Playground FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Commonly Used Data Structures 3. Standing on the Shoulders of Giants 4. Sorting Algorithms 5. Seeing the Forest through the Tree 6. Advanced Searching Methods 7. Graph Algorithms 8. Performance and Algorithm Efficiency 9. Choosing the Perfect Algorithm

Orders of common functions

When we compare the Big-O of two algorithms, we are comparing at the end how the running time and space requirements grow depending on the input data. We need to know how the algorithm will behave with any amount of data. Let's see the orders of common functions in ascending order.

O(1)

When the running time is constant, always with the same value, we have O(1). So the algorithm space/running time is not dependent on the input data. One example is the time needed to access an item in an array with the index. It uses just one instruction (at a high level) to do it. The pop function on a stack is another example of O(1) operations. The space complexity of the insertion sort also uses just one memory register, so it is O(1).

Here is an example:

    public func firstElement(array:[Int]) -> Int? 
    {
        return array.first
    }

Here we have a very simplified function that receives an array of integers and returns the first one (if it exists). This is...

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