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.

right, but my point is that trying to minimimize the number of comparisons in order to find the best algorithm is senseless when programing in perl where other operations like assignement or branching are equally (or more) expensive.

Actually, I doubt that even when implemented in assembler or C this algorithm is faster than the simple one in all the moderm processors where comparisons are not specially expensive.


In reply to Re^3: minimum, maximum and average of a list of numbers at the same time by salva
in thread minimum, maximum and average of a list of numbers at the same time by LucaPette

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