This is not really a comparison of the algorithm, but of how to write effective Perl. The algorithm is trying to reduce the number of comparisons from 2 per element to 3 per 2 elements. However, your code differs from the OP in a couple key ways that improve the efficiency. First, the OP dereferences the array pointer for each element access. Second, the OP winds up copying elements into temporary variables to work two at a time, whereas your code uses the nice aliasing behavior of for to avoid having to create new variables. In Perl the overhead of the extra comparisons are minor relative to the cost of creating new temporary variables.

-xdg

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In reply to Re^2: minimum, maximum and average of a list of numbers at the same time by xdg
in thread minimum, maximum and average of a list of numbers at the same time by LucaPette

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