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sorting - implementing merge sort in C++

I have studied the theory of the merge sort but don't have any idea of how to implement it in C++. My question is, merge sort creates arrays in recursion. But when implementing, how do we create arrays in runtime? or what is the general approach for this?

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To answer the question: Creating dynamically sized arrays at run-time is done using std::vector<T>. Ideally, you'd get your input using one of these. If not, it is easy to convert them. For example, you could create two arrays like this:

template <typename T>
void merge_sort(std::vector<T>& array) {
    if (1 < array.size()) {
        std::vector<T> array1(array.begin(), array.begin() + array.size() / 2);
        merge_sort(array1);
        std::vector<T> array2(array.begin() + array.size() / 2, array.end());
        merge_sort(array2);
        merge(array, array1, array2);
    }
}

However, allocating dynamic arrays is relatively slow and generally should be avoided when possible. For merge sort you can just sort subsequences of the original array and in-place merge them. It seems, std::inplace_merge() asks for bidirectional iterators.


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