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Which does NOT return sorted output for a vector of unique values (e.g., v = [3,7,2,5,1])?

sort(v)
8%
unique(v)
16%
union(v, [ ])
17%
intersect(v, v)
14%
setdiff(v, [ ])
12%
All return sorted output
33%
1193 Stimmen

ganesh
ganesh am 1 Apr. 2024
can you give solution oft these problrm
Rik
Rik am 2 Apr. 2024

You can try all options yourself and/or read the documentation for each to find the correct answer.

the cyclist
the cyclist am 27 Mär. 2024 (Bearbeitet am 27 Mär. 2024)
@goc3 is definitely a unique sort of person.
Rik
Rik am 19 Mär. 2024 (Bearbeitet am 19 Mär. 2024)
I don't know about the other functions, but unique used to return the original order (which is probably why the 'stable' switch exists).
I also find it interesting to see the orientation that each of these functions return.
Christian Schröder
Christian Schröder am 20 Mär. 2024
Once you know that unique returns sorted output, you can deduce that the last answer should be correct: it would not make sense for only one of the set functions to not return sorted output.
Rik
Rik am 21 Mär. 2024
Does it? Because I would also expect the orientation of the resulting vectors to be the same for all set functions, and yet they are not. Can you predict without testing (or reading the documentation) which is the odd one out?
Dyuman Joshi
Dyuman Joshi am 22 Mär. 2024 (Bearbeitet am 2 Apr. 2024)
I find it weird that the legacy syntaxes of these (setdiff, intersect and union) mathematical functions are not the same.
Quite inconsistent.
Christian Schröder
Christian Schröder am 21 Mär. 2024
Good point, that (orientation of the resulting vectors) is an inconsistency I can't explain. Then again, I only said "should be correct", not "is correct". ;)

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