A recurring theme in my life has been to implement and re-implement the sorting algorithms found in Harold Lorin’s treatise Sorting and Sort Systems and Thomas H. Corman et al.’s Algorithms. I purchased a copy of Lorin’s book in the summer of 1979 and Corman’s textbook in 1999 or 2000. This has been good exercise in translating from one computer language to a later and greater newer computer language. I began in BASIC and FORTRAN IV and transitioned to C, C++, C#, Common LISP, Java, Modula-2, Pascal, and Scheme in alphabetic not chronological order. In this blog we cover two C# applications, one from October 26, 2010, named Sorting Comparisons and the other from January 17, 2015, with the moniker Sorting.
In the Sorting Comparisons application, we compare the sorting algorithms: Heap Sort, Quick Sort, and Singleton’s Sort. The first two algorithms are from the Algorithms tome and Singleton’s Sort is from Lorin’s treatment. These are some of the fastest general purpose sorting algorithms available in my particular arsenal.





Sorting Comparisons Source Code
https://code.msdn.microsoft.com/windowsdesktop/Tests-of-Six-Sorting-94aa6fd0?redir=0
Author: jamespatewilliamsjr
My whole legal name is James Pate Williams, Jr. I was born in LaGrange, Georgia approximately 70 years ago. I barely graduated from LaGrange High School with low marks in June 1971. Later in June 1979, I graduated from LaGrange College with a Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry with a little over a 3 out 4 Grade Point Average (GPA). In the Spring Quarter of 1978, I taught myself how to program a Texas Instruments desktop programmable calculator and in the Summer Quarter of 1978 I taught myself Dayton BASIC (Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) on LaGrange College's Data General Eclipse minicomputer. I took courses in BASIC in the Fall Quarter of 1978 and FORTRAN IV (Formula Translator IV) in the Winter Quarter of 1979. Professor Kenneth Cooper, a genius poly-scientist taught me a course in the Intel 8085 microprocessor architecture and assembly and machine language. We would hand assemble our programs and insert the resulting machine code into our crude wooden box computer which was designed and built by Professor Cooper. From 1990 to 1994 I earned a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science from LaGrange College. I had a 4 out of 4 GPA in the period 1990 to 1994. I took courses in C, COBOL, and Pascal during my BS work. After graduating from LaGrange College a second time in May 1994, I taught myself C++. In December 1995, I started using the Internet and taught myself client-server programming. I created a website in 1997 which had C and C# implementations of algorithms from the "Handbook of Applied Cryptography" by Alfred J. Menezes, et. al., and some other cryptography and number theory textbooks and treatises.
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