NIST

bitonic sort

(algorithm)

Definition: Compare, and swap if necessary, pairs of elements in parallel. Subsets are sorted then merged.

Also known as Batcher sort.

Generalization (I am a kind of ...)
oblivious algorithm.

Note: This takes O((log n)2/2) stages (or steps) with n/2 comparators at each stage.

This sorts increasingly larger intermingled subsets, somewhat like Shell sort, and merges subsets, like merge sort.

Elements are compared and swapped in a fixed (oblivious) schedule, so this may be implemented with only conditional swaps. Here is a Batcher sort for four elements:

     compareAndSwap(0, 1);
compareAndSwap(2, 3);
compareAndSwap(0, 2);
compareAndSwap(1, 3);
compareAndSwap(1, 2);
where compareAndSwap(i,j) is if (a[i] < a[j]) Swap(a[i], a[j]).

Knuth calls this Algorithm 5.2.2M [Knuth98, 3:111].

Author: PEB

Implementation

explanation, analysis, bibliography, etc. (Java). reference source code (C) and in (Java).

More information

K. E. Batcher, Sorting Networks and their Applications, Proc. AFIPS Spring Joint Computer Conference, 32:307-314, 1968.


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Entry modified 31 December 2012.
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Paul E. Black, "bitonic sort", in Dictionary of Algorithms and Data Structures [online], Paul E. Black, ed., U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology. 31 December 2012. (accessed TODAY) Available from: http://www.nist.gov/dads/HTML/bitonicSort.html

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