This is If you dont use std::list.
With a Selection sort algorthm, you simply sort items 0 to 3 ( selectionSort(list,3)) if you know that thats the range.
Not the entire range till the end.
Sample code :
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
void selectionSort(int *array,int length)//selection sort function
{
int i,j,min,minat;
for(i=0;i<(length-1);i++)
{
minat=i;
min=array[i];
for(j=i+1;j<(length);j++) //select the min of the rest of array
{
if(min>array[j]) //ascending order for descending reverse
{
minat=j; //the position of the min element
min=array[j];
}
}
int temp=array[i] ;
array[i]=array[minat]; //swap
array[minat]=temp;
}
}
void printElements(int *array,int length) //print array elements
{
int i=0;
for(i=0;i<length;i++) cout<<array[i]<<" ";
cout<<" \n ";
}
int main(void)
{
int list[]={1,3,2,4,5,6}; // array to sort
int number_of_elements=6;
cout<<" \nBefore selectionSort\n";
printElements(list,number_of_elements);
selectionSort(list,3);
cout<<" \nAfter selectionSort\n";
printElements(list,number_of_elements);
cout<<" \nPress any key to continue\n";
cin.ignore();
cin.get();
return 0;
}
Output:
Before selectionSort
1 3 2 4 5 6
After selectionSort
1 2 3 4 5 6
Press any key to continue
3if the list contains2,3,1,...? – John Dibling Oct 16 '12 at 11:03