in reply to Re: Re: Re: Re: Find a number in a list closest to a target
in thread Find a number in a list closest to a target
Those are for building binary trees, which wouldn't really suit your purpose. There are amost certainly one (or more) modules on CPAN that would provide for binary searching a sorted array, but the usual pattern for these is that they return undef or -1 to indicate that the target value wasn't found, whereas you want to retrieve the index of the nearest lower value so that you can then perform your differencing between the target value and the two nearest. Ie. The values at the index returned and that index +1.
Here's some code that will do that. Note I didn't need to sort my test array as it is already sorted.
#! perl -slw use strict; sub bsearch { my( $aref, $value ) = @_; my( $lo, $hi, $mid ) = ( 0, $#{ $aref } ); while( $lo <= $hi ) { $mid = int( ($lo + $hi) / 2 ); if( $value > $aref->[ $mid ] ) { $lo = $mid + 1; } elsif( $value < $aref->[ $mid ] ) { $hi = $mid - 1; } else { #Found an exact match so return that index return $mid; } } # Didn't find an exact match so return the index below where we st +opped # Or if the value is lower than the # lowest element, return 0 return $aref->[ $mid ] > $value ? $mid - 1 : $mid; } my @array = 0 .. 100; my $iNearest = bsearch \@array, 31.5; print 31.5, ' : ', $iNearest, ' : ',$array[ $iNearest ]; print "$_ => @{[ bsearch \@array, $_ ]}" for -1, 0, 1, 2, 31.1, 31.999, 50, 98, 99, 100, 101; __END__ P:\test>bsearch 31.5 : 31 : 31 -1 => 0 0 => 0 1 => 1 2 => 2 31.1 => 31 31.999 => 31 50 => 50 98 => 98 99 => 99 100 => 100 101 => 100
You could also code this using a recursive algorithm, but I tend to avoid recursion if the iterative solution doesn't require me to maintain my own stack.
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