Trying to find an efficient way to obtain the top N items in a very large list, possibly containing duplicates.
I first tried sorting & slicing, which works. But this seems unnnecessary. You shouldn't need to sort a very large list if you just want the top 20 members.
So I wrote a recursive routine which builds the top-n list. This also works, but is very much slower than the non-recursive one!
Question: Which is my second routine (elite2) so much slower than elite, and how do I make it faster ? My code is attached below. Thanks.
import scala.collection.SeqView
import scala.math.min
object X {
def elite(s: SeqView[Int, List[Int]], k:Int):List[Int] = {
s.sorted.reverse.force.slice(0,min(k,s.size))
}
def elite2(s: SeqView[Int, List[Int]], k:Int, s2:List[Int]=Nil):List[Int] = {
if( k == 0 || s.size == 0) s2.reverse
else {
val m = s.max
val parts = s.force.partition(_==m)
val whole = if( parts._1.size > 1) parts._1.tail:::parts._2 else parts._2
elite2( whole.view, k-1, m::s2 )
}
}
def main(args:Array[String]) = {
val N = 1000000/3
val x = List(N to 1 by -1).flatten.map(x=>List(x,x,x)).flatten.view
println(elite2(x,20))
println(elite(x,20))
}
}