0x1B. C - Sorting algorithms & Big O C Algorithm Data structure By: Alexandre Gautier Weight: 2 Project to be done in teams of 2 people (your team: Abdulkareem Olumoh) Ongoing second chance project - started Sep 20, 2023 6:00 AM, must end by Sep 30, 2023 6:00 AM An auto review will be launched at the deadline In a nutshell… Contribution: 100.0% Auto QA review: 0.0/48 mandatory & 0.0/100 optional Altogether: 0.0% Mandatory: 0.0% Optional: 0.0% Contribution: 100.0% Calculation: 100.0% * (0.0% + (0.0% * 0.0%) ) == 0.0%

Background Context
This project is meant to be done by groups of two students. Each group of two should pair program for at least the mandatory part.

Resources
Read or watch:

Sorting algorithm
Big O notation
Sorting algorithms animations

15 sorting algorithms in 6 minutes (WARNING: The following video can trigger seizure/epilepsy. It is not required for the project, as it is only a funny visualization of different sorting algorithms) CS50 Algorithms explanation in detail by David Malan All about sorting algorithms Learning Objectives At the end of this project, you are expected to be able to explain to anyone, without the help of Google:

General
At least four different sorting algorithms
What is the Big O notation, and how to evaluate the time complexity of an algorithm
How to select the best sorting algorithm for a given input
What is a stable sorting algorithm
Copyright - Plagiarism
You are tasked to come up with solutions for the tasks below yourself to meet with the above learning objectives.
You will not be able to meet the objectives of this or any following project by copying and pasting someone else’s work.
You are not allowed to publish any content of this project.
Any form of plagiarism is strictly forbidden and will result in removal from the program.
Requirements
General
Allowed editors: vi, vim, emacs
All your files will be compiled on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS using gcc, using the options -Wall -Werror -Wextra -pedantic -std=gnu89
All your files should end with a new line
A README.md file, at the root of the folder of the project, is mandatory
Your code should use the Betty style. It will be checked using betty-style.pl and betty-doc.pl
You are not allowed to use global variables
No more than 5 functions per file
Unless specified otherwise, you are not allowed to use the standard library. Any use of functions like printf, puts, … is totally forbidden.
In the following examples, the main.c files are shown as examples. You can use them to test your functions, but you don’t have to push them to your repo (if you do we won’t take them into account). We will use our own main.c files at compilation. Our main.c files might be different from the one shown in the examples
The prototypes of all your functions should be included in your header file called sort.h
Don’t forget to push your header file
All your header files should be include guarded
A list/array does not need to be sorted if its size is less than 2.
GitHub
There should be one project repository per group. If you clone/fork/whatever a project repository with the same name before the second deadline, you risk a 0% score.

More Info
Data Structure and Functions
For this project you are given the following print_array, and print_list functions:

#include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h>

/**
 * print_array - Prints an array of integers
 *
 * @array: The array to be printed
 * @size: Number of elements in @array
 */

void print_array(const int *array, size_t size) { size_t i;

i = 0;
while (array && i < size)
{
	if (i > 0)
		printf(", ");
	printf("%d", array[i]);
	++i;
}
printf("\n");

} #include <stdio.h> #include "sort.h"

/**

  • print_list - Prints a list of integers

  • @list: The list to be printed */ void print_list(const listint_t *list) { int i;

    i = 0; while (list) { if (i > 0) printf(", "); printf("%d", list->n); ++i; list = list->next; } printf("\n"); } Our files print_array.c and print_list.c (containing the print_array and print_list functions) will be compiled with your functions during the correction. Please declare the prototype of the functions print_array and print_list in your sort.h header file Please use the following data structure for doubly linked list: /**

  • struct listint_s - Doubly linked list node

  • @n: Integer stored in the node

  • @prev: Pointer to the previous element of the list

  • @next: Pointer to the next element of the list */ typedef struct listint_s { const int n; struct listint_s *prev; struct listint_s *next; } listint_t; Please, note this format is used for Quiz and Task questions.

    O(1) O(n) O(n!) n square -> O(n^2) log(n) -> O(log(n)) n * log(n) -> O(nlog(n)) n + k -> O(n+k) … Please use the “short” notation (don’t use constants). Example: O(nk) or O(wn) should be written O(n). If an answer is required within a file, all your answers files must have a newline at the end.

    Tests Here is a quick tip to help you test your sorting algorithms with big sets of random integers: Random.org