Reputation: 1073
I'm getting weird results from trying to use qsort on this array of structs.
I have this struct:
struct access_data{
int sector;
int arrival_time;
int checked;
int processed;
};
I construct an array of access_data pointers from a file such that they are sorted by arrival_time, but I need to sort them by sector later, so I have the following:
int compare_data(const void* a, const void* b){
if (((access_data*)a)->sector < ((access_data*)b)->sector)
return 1;
else if (((access_data*)a)->sector > ((access_data*)b)->sector)
return -1;
else
return 0;
}
void scan(access_data* data[], int len, int sec_to_sec_seek){
qsort(data, len, sizeof(access_data*), &compare_data);
show_data(data, len);
}
show_data simply prints the data, but I get the following on a sample input; again, sorted already by arrival time:
data[0]: arrival_time: 7, sector: 3
data[1]: arrival_time: 6, sector: 8
data[2]: arrival_time: 5, sector: 6
data[3]: arrival_time: 4, sector: 5
data[4]: arrival_time: 3, sector: 12
data[5]: arrival_time: 2, sector: 10
data[6]: arrival_time: 1, sector: 1
data[7]: arrival_time: 0, sector: 2
It is simply not sorting by sector, but by reverse arrival time. I'm really at a complete loss at to what could be causing this behavior.
Upvotes: 13
Views: 10325
Reputation: 1939
printf("size=%d",sizeof(access_data*));
prints 4, expected: 16. This was the biggest problem: sorting 8 times 4 bytes, not 8 times 16.
qsort() expects a pointer-to-data but scan() receives a pointer-to-pointer-to data. Recommended fix:
void scan(access_data data[], int len, int sec_to_sec_seek){
qsort(data, len, sizeof(access_data), &compare_data);
show_data(data, len);
}
Your compare_data()
is equal to
int compare_data(const void* a, const void* b){
return ((access_data*)b)->sector - ((access_data*)a)->sector;
}
My full working program:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
struct access_data {
int sector;
int arrival_time;
int checked;
int processed;
};
typedef struct access_data access_data;
void show_data(access_data*data, int len) {
printf("Showing size = %d", sizeof(access_data*));
for (int i = 0;i < len; i++) {
printf("data[%d]: arrival_time: %d, sector: %d\n",i,data[i].arrival_time,data[i].sector);
}
}
int compare_data(const void* a, const void* b){
return ((access_data*)b)->sector - ((access_data*)a)->sector;
}
int compare_data1(const void* a, const void* b){
if (((access_data*)a)->sector < ((access_data*)b)->sector)
return 1;
else if (((access_data*)a)->sector > ((access_data*)b)->sector)
return -1;
else
return 0;
}
void scan(access_data data[], int len, int sec_to_sec_seek){
qsort(data, len, sizeof(access_data), &compare_data);
show_data(data, len);
}
int main() {
printf("START\n");
access_data data[8] = {
{ 3, 4, 5, 6 },
{ 2, 1, 5, 5 },
{ 1, 1, 3, 6 },
{ 4, 4, 5, 4 },
{ 5, 4, 3, 4 },
{ 6, 2, 5, 6 },
{ 7, 2, 5, 4 },
{ 0, 4, 5, 6 }
};
scan(data, 8, 0);
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2298
Your code suggests that you are actually trying sort an array of pointers to struct.
In this case you are missing a level of indirection. You also have your directions reversed.
Your compare_data routine would be fine for reverse sorting an array of structs, but you wish to sort an array of pointers based on what they point to.
int compare_pointed_to_data(const void* a, const void* b) {
// a is a pointer into the array of pointers
struct access_data *ptr_to_left_struct = *(access_data**)a;
struct access_data *ptr_to_right_struct = *(access_data**)b;
if ( ptr_to_left_struct->sector < ptr_to_right_struct->sector)
return -1;
else if (ptr_to_left_struct->sector > ptr_to_right_struct->sector)
return 1;
else
return 0;
}
Upvotes: 27
Reputation: 677
The problem here is that you are telling QSort to sort an array of pointers, and as a result the parameters in the comparator are pointers to pointers.
int compare_data(const void* _a, const void* _b){
access_data *a = *(access_data**)_a, *b = *(access_data**)_b;
if ((a)->sector < (b)->sector)
return 1;
else if ((a)->sector > (b)->sector)
return -1;
else
return 0;
}
void scan(access_data* data[], int len, int sec_to_sec_seek){
qsort(data, len, sizeof(access_data*), &compare_data);
show_data(data, len);
}
Let me know if you still have any questions
Upvotes: 1