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What is the worst case scenario for quicksort?

When does the quicksort algorithm take O(n^2) ti开发者_开发百科me?


Quicksort works by taking a pivot, then putting all the elements lower than that pivot on one side and all the higher elements on the other; it then recursively sorts the two sub groups in the same way (all the way down until everything is sorted.) Now if you pick the worst pivot each time (the highest or lowest element in the list) you'll only have one group to sort, with everything in that group other than the original pivot that you picked. This in essence gives you n groups that each need to be iterated through n times, hence the O(n^2) complexity.

The most common reason for this occurring is if the pivot is chosen to be the first or last element in the list in the quicksort implementation. For unsorted lists this is just as valid as any other, however for sorted or nearly sorted lists (which occur quite commonly in practice) this is very likely to give you the worst case scenario. This is why all half-decent implementations tend to take a pivot from the centre of the list.

There are modifications to the standard quicksort algorithm to avoid this edge case - one example is the dual-pivot quicksort that was integrated into Java 7.


In short, Quicksort for sorting an array lowest element first works like this:

  1. Choose a pivot element
  2. Presort array, such that all elements smaller than the pivot are on the left side
  3. Recursively do step 1. and 2. for the left side and the right side

Ideally, you would want a pivot element that partitions the sequence in two equally long subsequences but this is not so easy.

There are different schemes for choosing the pivot element. Early versions just took the leftmost element. In the worst case, the pivot element will always be the lowest element of the current range.

Leftmost element is pivot

In this case it can be easily thought out that the worst case is an monotonic increasing array:

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20

Rightmost element is pivot

Similarly, when choosing the rightmost element the worst case will be a decreasing sequence.

20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0

Center element is pivot

One possible remedy for the worst-case for presorted arrays, is to use the center element (or slightly left of center if the sequence is of even length). Then, the worst case would be quite more exotic. It can be constructed by modifying the Quicksort algorithm to set the array elements corresponding to the currently selected pivot element to a monotonic increasing value. I.e. we know the first pivot is the center, so the center must be the lowest value, e.g. 0. Next it gets swapped to the leftmost, i.e. the leftmost value is now in the center and would be the next pivot element, so it must be 1. Now, we can already guess that the array would look like this:

1 ? ? 0 ? ? ?

Here is the C++ code for the modified Quicksort to generate a worst sequence:

// g++ -std=c++11 worstCaseQuicksort.cpp && ./a.out

#include <algorithm>    // swap
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include <numeric>      // iota

int main( void )
{
    std::vector<int> v(20); /**< will hold the worst case later */

    /* p basically saves the indices of what was the initial position of the
     * elements of v. As they get swapped around by Quicksort p becomes a
     * permutation */
    auto p = v;
    std::iota( p.begin(), p.end(), 0 );

    /* in the worst case we need to work on v.size( sequences, because
     * the initial sequence is always split after the first element */
    for ( auto i = 0u; i < v.size(); ++i )
    {
        /* i can be interpreted as:
         *   - subsequence starting index
         *   - current minimum value, if we start at 0 */
        /* note thate in the last step iPivot == v.size()-1 */
        auto const iPivot = ( v.size()-1 + i )/2;
        v[ p[ iPivot ] ] = i;
        std::swap( p[ iPivot ], p[i] );
    }

    for ( auto x : v ) std::cout << " " << x;
}

The result:

                                    0
                                    0  1
                                 1  0  2
                                 2  0  1  3
                              1  3  0  2  4
                              4  2  0  1  3  5
                           1  5  3  0  2  4  6
                           4  2  6  0  1  3  5  7
                        1  5  3  7  0  2  4  6  8
                        8  2  6  4  0  1  3  5  7  9
                     1  9  3  7  5  0  2  4  6  8 10
                     6  2 10  4  8  0  1  3  5  7  9 11
                  1  7  3 11  5  9  0  2  4  6  8 10 12
                 10  2  8  4 12  6  0  1  3  5  7  9 11 13
               1 11  3  9  5 13  7  0  2  4  6  8 10 12 14
               8  2 12  4 10  6 14  0  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15
            1  9  3 13  5 11  7 15  0  2  4  6  8 10 12 14 16
           16  2 10  4 14  6 12  8  0  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17
         1 17  3 11  5 15  7 13  9  0  2  4  6  8 10 12 14 16 18
        10  2 18  4 12  6 16  8 14  0  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19
      1 11  3 19  5 13  7 17  9 15  0  2  4  6  8 10 12 14 16 18 20
     16  2 12  4 20  6 14  8 18 10  0  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19 21
   1 17  3 13  5 21  7 15  9 19 11  0  2  4  6  8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22
  12  2 18  4 14  6 22  8 16 10 20  0  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23
1 13  3 19  5 15  7 23  9 17 11 21  0  2  4  6  8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24

There is order in this. The right side is just increments of two starting with zero. The left side also has an order. Let's format the left side for the 73 element long worst case sequence nicely using Ascii art:

  0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  1     3     5     7     9    11    13    15    17    19    21    23    25    27    29    31    33    35   
    37          39          41          43          45          47          49          51          53      
          55                      57                      59                      61                      63
                                              65                                              67            
                                                                      69                                    
                      71

The header is the element index. In the first row numbers starting from 1 and increasing by 2 are given to every 2nd element. In the second row the same is done to every 4th element, in the 3rd row numbers are assigned to every 8th element and so on. In this case the first value to be written in the i-th row is at index 2^i-1, but for certain lengths this looks a tad different.

The resulting structure is reminiscent to an inverted binary tree whose nodes are labeled bottom-up starting from the leaves.

Median of leftmost, center and rightmost elements is pivot

Another way is to use the median of the leftmost, the center and the rightmost element. In this case the worst case can only be, that the w.l.o.g. left subsequence is of length 2 (not just length 1 like in the examples above). Also we assume that the rightmost value will always be the highest of the median-of-three. This also means it is the highest of all values. Making adjustments in the program above, we now have this:

auto p = v;
std::iota( p.begin(), p.end(), 0 );
auto i = 0u;
for ( ; i < v.size(); i+=2 )
{
    auto const iPivot0 = i;
    auto const iPivot1 = ( i + v.size()-1 )/2;
    v[ p[ iPivot1 ] ] = i+1;
    v[ p[ iPivot0 ] ] = i;
    std::swap( p[ iPivot1 ], p[i+1] );
}
if ( v.size() > 0 && i == v.size() )
    v[ v.size()-1 ] = i-1;

The generated sequences are:

                                     0
                                     0  1
                                  0  1  2
                                  0  1  2  3
                               0  2  1  3  4
                               0  2  1  3  4  5
                            0  4  2  1  3  5  6
                            0  4  2  1  3  5  6  7
                         0  4  2  6  1  3  5  7  8
                         0  4  2  6  1  3  5  7  8  9
                      0  8  2  6  4  1  3  5  7  9 10
                      0  8  2  6  4  1  3  5  7  9 10 11
                   0  6  2 10  4  8  1  3  5  7  9 11 12
                   0  6  2 10  4  8  1  3  5  7  9 11 12 13
                0 10  2  8  4 12  6  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 14
                0 10  2  8  4 12  6  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 14 15
             0  8  2 12  4 10  6 14  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 16
             0  8  2 12  4 10  6 14  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 16 17
          0 16  2 10  4 14  6 12  8  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 18
          0 16  2 10  4 14  6 12  8  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 18 19
       0 10  2 18  4 12  6 16  8 14  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19 20
       0 10  2 18  4 12  6 16  8 14  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19 20 21
    0 16  2 12  4 20  6 14  8 18 10  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19 21 22
    0 16  2 12  4 20  6 14  8 18 10  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19 21 22 23
 0 12  2 18  4 14  6 22  8 16 10 20  1  3  5  7  9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 24

Pseudorandom element with random seed 0 is pivot

The worst case sequences for center element and median-of-three look already pretty random, but in order to make Quicksort even more robust the pivot element can be chosen randomly. If the random sequence used is at least reproducible on every Quicksort run, then we can also construct a worst case sequence for that. We only have to adjust the iPivot = line in the first program, e.g. to:

srand(0); // you shouldn't use 0 as a seed
for ( auto i = 0u; i < v.size(); ++i )
{
    auto const iPivot = i + rand() % ( v.size() - i );
    [...]

The generated sequences are:

                                     0
                                     1  0
                                  1  0  2
                                  2  3  1  0
                               1  4  2  0  3
                               5  0  1  2  3  4
                            6  0  5  4  2  1  3
                            7  2  4  3  6  1  5  0
                         4  0  3  6  2  8  7  1  5
                         2  3  6  0  8  5  9  7  1  4
                      3  6  2  5  7  4  0  1  8 10  9
                      8 11  7  6 10  4  9  0  5  2  3  1
                   0 12  3 10  6  8 11  7  2  4  9  1  5
                   9  0  8 10 11  3 12  4  6  7  1  2  5 13
                2  4 14  5  9  1 12  6 13  8  3  7 10  0 11
                3 15  1 13  5  8  9  0 10  4  7  2  6 11 12 14
            11 16  8  9 10  4  6  1  3  7  0 12  5 14  2 15 13
             6  0 15  7 11  4  5 14 13 17  9  2 10  3 12 16  1  8
          8 14  0 12 18 13  3  7  5 17  9  2  4 15 11 10 16  1  6
          3  6 16  0 11  4 15  9 13 19  7  2 10 17 12  5  1  8 18 14
       6  0 14  9 15  2  8  1 11  7  3 19 18 16 20 17 13 12 10  4  5
      14 16  7  9  8  1  3 21  5  4 12 17 10 19 18 15  6  0 11  2 13 20
    1  2 22 11 16  9 10 14 12  6 17  0  5 20  4 21 19  8  3  7 18 15 13
   22  1 15 18  8 19 13  0 14 23  9 12 10  5 11 21  6  4 17  2 16  7  3 20
 2 19 17  6 10 13 11  8  0 16 12 22  4 18 15 20  3 24 21  7  5 14  9  1 23

So how to check whether those sequences are correct?

  • Measure time it took for the sequences. Plot time over the sequence length N. If the curve scales with O(N^2) instead of O(N log(N)), then these are indeed worst case sequences.
  • Adjust a correct Quicksort to give debug output about the subsequence lengths and/or the chosen pivot elements. One of the subsequences should always be of length 1 (or 2 for median-of-three). The chosen pivot elements printed should be increasing.

What is the worst case scenario for quicksort?


Getting a pivot equal to the lowest or highest number, should also trigger the worst case scenario of O(n2).


Different implementations of quicksort have different datasets required to give it a worstcase runtime. It depends on where the algorithm selects it's pivot-element.

And also as Ghpst said, selecting the biggest or smallest number would give you a worstcase.

If I remember correctly quicksort normally uses a random element for pivot to minimize the chance of getting a worstcase.


I think if the array is in revrse order then it will be worst case for pivot the last element of that array


The factors that contribute to the worst-case scenario of quicksort are as follows:

  • Worst case occurs when the subarrays are completely unbalanced
  • The worst case occurs when there are 0 elements in one subarray and n-1 elements in the other.

In other words, the worst-case running time of quicksort occurs when Quicksort takes in a sorted array (in decreasing order), to be on the time complexity of O(n^2).

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