just use sort to order the keys of the hash

As a general rule, don't sort to retrieve the min/max of a list. That's spectacularly inefficient. Scan the list once for a cost of O(n) and retrieve the information required. If you sort, depending on your algorithm and dataset you'll usually get around O(n log n). A quick benchmark bears this out:

#! /usr/local/bin/perl -w use strict; use Benchmark qw/cmpthese/; my %h; $h{ int(rand 1_000_000) } = rand 1000 for 1..10_000; sub min_by_sort { ( sort {$a <=> $b} keys %h )[0] } sub min_by_scan { my $min = undef; (not defined $min or $min > $_) and $min = $_ for keys %h; $min; } print "min_by_sort = ", min_by_sort(), "\n"; print "min_by_scan = ", min_by_scan(), "\n"; cmpthese( shift || -5, { min_by_sort => \&min_by_sort, min_by_scan => \&min_by_scan, } )

For a list of ten elements, the scan does much better than the sort:

min_by_sort = 107 min_by_scan = 107 Benchmark: running min_by_scan, min_by_sort, each for at least 5 CPU s +econds... min_by_scan: 4 wallclock secs ( 5.44 usr + 0.00 sys = 5.44 CPU) @ 9 +5284.97/s (n=518112) min_by_sort: 6 wallclock secs ( 5.12 usr + 0.00 sys = 5.12 CPU) @ 1 +52355.18/s (n=779630) Rate min_by_scan min_by_sort min_by_scan 95285/s -- -37% min_by_sort 152355/s 60% --

update: eserte points out that I misread the results. Somehow I managed to past in the results of something else (and I forget what). The correct results for a list of 10 elements are as follows:

min_by_scan: 6 wallclock secs ( 5.30 usr + 0.00 sys = 5.30 CPU) @ 9 +3681.46/s (n=496219) min_by_sort: 6 wallclock secs ( 5.28 usr + 0.00 sys = 5.28 CPU) @ 7 +1843.03/s (n=379421) Rate min_by_sort min_by_scan min_by_sort 71843/s -- -23% min_by_scan 93681/s 30% --

If the hash contains around 10 000 keys (note that the quick and dirty initialisation used means that I might generate the same key twice) the scan method is still a winner, although sort is catching up because of the pure-C/perl-ops diffential.

min_by_sort = 301 min_by_scan = 301 Benchmark: running min_by_scan, min_by_sort, each for at least 5 CPU s +econds... min_by_scan: 6 wallclock secs ( 5.48 usr + 0.01 sys = 5.48 CPU) @ 9 +4.63/s (n=519) min_by_sort: 6 wallclock secs ( 5.30 usr + 0.00 sys = 5.30 CPU) @ 7 +3.14/s (n=388) Rate min_by_sort min_by_scan min_by_sort 73.1/s -- -23% min_by_scan 94.6/s 29% --

So for really large hashes you should use sort, otherwise scan. This is only due to the fact that sort is a single perl op (modern perls can recognise sort {$a <=> $b}) at which point you drop down into optimised C. The scan loop will run a small loop of ops through the interpreter which limits its flat-out performance. If you were writing both in C the scan would always win.

For instance, if you disable the inlined sort by creating a comparator like sort {$a+1 <=> $b+1} sort's improvement quickly evaporates and the scan continues to be the best performer. It's something peculiar to Perl, and something to keep in mind.

update: A thought just came to me over lunch: even if you consider the speed argument weak (which is fine by me) a more damning problem is how much memory is used. The sort will require a second copy of the list to be held in memory. Given Perl's propensity to consume memory, this will be a significant factor for large lists.

- another intruder with the mooring of the heat of the Perl


In reply to Re^2: Get hash value with the lowest key by grinder
in thread Get hash value with the lowest key by kiat

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