Items in a list may undergo statistical inquiries such as finding the mean, median, and mode values. Finding the mean and mode values does not require the list to be ordered. However, to find the median in a list of numbers, the list must first be ordered. Finding the median requires you to find the element in the middle position of the ordered list. In addition, this can be used when we want to find the last-smallest item in the list or the first-smallest item in the list. In such situations, selection algorithms can be useful.
To find the ith smallest number in an unordered list of items, the index of where that item occurs is important to obtain. Since the elements of the list are not sorted, it is difficult to know whether the element at index 0 in a list is really the first-smallest number.
A pragmatic and obvious thing to do when dealing with unordered...