Why is Bubble Sort implementation looping forever?

Question:

In class we are doing sorting algorithms and, although I understand them fine when talking about them and writing pseudocode, I am having problems writing actual code for them.

This is my attempt in Python:

mylist = [12, 5, 13, 8, 9, 65]

def bubble(badList):
    length = len(badList) - 1
    unsorted = True

    while unsorted:
        for element in range(0,length):
            unsorted = False
            if badList[element] > badList[element + 1]:
                hold = badList[element + 1]
                badList[element + 1] = badList[element]
                badList[element] = hold
                print badList
            else:
                unsorted = True

print bubble(mylist)

Now, this (as far as I can tell) sorts correctly, but once it finishes it just loops indefinitely.

How can this code be fixed so the function finishes properly and correctly sorts a list of any (reasonable) size?

P.S. I know I should not really have prints in a function and I should have a return, but I just have not done that yet as my code does not really work yet.

Asked By: Josh Hunt

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Answers:

This is what happens when you use variable name of negative meaning, you need to invert their values. The following would be easier to understand:

sorted = False
while not sorted:
    ...

On the other hand, the logic of the algorithm is a little bit off. You need to check whether two elements swapped during the for loop. Here’s how I would write it:

def bubble(values):
    length = len(values) - 1
    sorted = False
    while not sorted:
        sorted = True
        for element in range(0,length):
            if values[element] > values[element + 1]:
                 hold = values[element + 1]
                 values[element + 1] = values[element]
                 values[element] = hold
                 sorted = False
    return values
Answered By: Martin Cote

Your use of the Unsorted variable is wrong; you want to have a variable that tells you if you have swapped two elements; if you have done that, you can exit your loop, otherwise, you need to loop again. To fix what you’ve got here, just put the “unsorted = false” in the body of your if case; remove your else case; and put “unsorted = true before your for loop.

Answered By: Paul Sonier

You’ve got a couple of errors in there. The first is in length, and the second is in your use of unsorted (as stated by McWafflestix). You probably also want to return the list if you’re going to print it:

mylist = [12, 5, 13, 8, 9, 65]

def bubble(badList):
    length = len(badList) - 2
    unsorted = True

    while unsorted:
        for element in range(0,length):
            unsorted = False

            if badList[element] > badList[element + 1]:
                hold = badList[element + 1]
                badList[element + 1] = badList[element]
                badList[element] = hold
                print badList
                unsorted = True

    return badList

print bubble(mylist)

eta: You’re right, the above is buggy as hell. My bad for not testing through some more examples.

def bubble2(badList):
    swapped = True
    length = len(badList) - 2

    while swapped:
        swapped = False
        for i in range(0, length):
            if badList[i] > badList[i + 1]:

                # swap
                hold = badList[i + 1]
                badList[i + 1] = badList[i]
                badList[i] = hold

                swapped = True

    return badList
Answered By: Trevor Oke

Answers provided by the-fury and Martin Cote fixed the problem of the infinite loop, but my code would still not work correctly (for a larger list, it would not sort correctly.). I ended up ditching the unsorted variable and used a counter instead.

def bubble(badList):
    length = len(badList) - 1
    n = 0
    while n < len(badList):
        for element in range(0,length):
            if badList[element] > badList[element + 1]:
                hold = badList[element + 1]
                badList[element + 1] = badList[element]
                badList[element] = hold
                n = 0
            else:
                n += 1
    return badList

if __name__ == '__main__':
    mylist = [90, 10, 2, 76, 17, 66, 57, 23, 57, 99]
    print bubble(mylist)

If anyone could provide any pointers on how to improve my code in the comments, it would be much appreciated.

Answered By: Josh Hunt
def bubble_sort(l):
    for passes_left in range(len(l)-1, 0, -1):
        for index in range(passes_left):
            if l[index] < l[index + 1]:
               l[index], l[index + 1] = l[index + 1], l[index]
    return l
Answered By: mtasic85

The goal of bubble sort is to move the heavier items at the bottom in each round, while moving the lighter items up. In the inner loop, where you compare the elements, you don’t have to iterate the whole list in each turn. The heaviest is already placed last. The swapped variable is an extra check so we can mark that the list is now sorted and avoid continuing with unnecessary calculations.

def bubble(badList):
    length = len(badList)
    for i in range(0,length):
        swapped = False
        for element in range(0, length-i-1):
            if badList[element] > badList[element + 1]:
                hold = badList[element + 1]
                badList[element + 1] = badList[element]
                badList[element] = hold
                swapped = True
        if not swapped: break

    return badList

Your version 1, corrected:

def bubble(badList):
    length = len(badList) - 1
    unsorted = True
    while unsorted:
        unsorted = False
        for element in range(0,length):
            #unsorted = False
            if badList[element] > badList[element + 1]:
                 hold = badList[element + 1]
                 badList[element + 1] = badList[element]
                 badList[element] = hold
                 unsorted = True
                 #print badList
             #else:
                 #unsorted = True

     return badList
Answered By: Nick Dandoulakis

To explain why your script isn’t working right now, I’ll rename the variable unsorted to sorted.

At first, your list isn’t yet sorted. Of course, we set sorted to False.

As soon as we start the while loop, we assume that the list is already sorted. The idea is this: as soon as we find two elements that are not in the right order, we set sorted back to False. sorted will remain True only if there were no elements in the wrong order.

sorted = False  # We haven't started sorting yet

while not sorted:
    sorted = True  # Assume the list is now sorted
    for element in range(0, length):
        if badList[element] > badList[element + 1]:
            sorted = False  # We found two elements in the wrong order
            hold = badList[element + 1]
            badList[element + 1] = badList[element]
            badList[element] = hold
    # We went through the whole list. At this point, if there were no elements
    # in the wrong order, sorted is still True. Otherwise, it's false, and the
    # while loop executes again.

There are also minor little issues that would help the code be more efficient or readable.

  • In the for loop, you use the variable element. Technically, element is not an element; it’s a number representing a list index. Also, it’s quite long. In these cases, just use a temporary variable name, like i for “index”.

    for i in range(0, length):
    
  • The range command can also take just one argument (named stop). In that case, you get a list of all the integers from 0 to that argument.

    for i in range(length):
    
  • The Python Style Guide recommends that variables be named in lowercase with underscores. This is a very minor nitpick for a little script like this; it’s more to get you accustomed to what Python code most often resembles.

    def bubble(bad_list):
    
  • To swap the values of two variables, write them as a tuple assignment. The right hand side gets evaluated as a tuple (say, (badList[i+1], badList[i]) is (3, 5)) and then gets assigned to the two variables on the left hand side ((badList[i], badList[i+1])).

    bad_list[i], bad_list[i+1] = bad_list[i+1], bad_list[i]
    

Put it all together, and you get this:

my_list = [12, 5, 13, 8, 9, 65]

def bubble(bad_list):
    length = len(bad_list) - 1
    sorted = False

    while not sorted:
        sorted = True
        for i in range(length):
            if bad_list[i] > bad_list[i+1]:
                sorted = False
                bad_list[i], bad_list[i+1] = bad_list[i+1], bad_list[i]

bubble(my_list)
print my_list

(I removed your print statement too, by the way.)

Answered By: Wesley

#A very simple function, can be optimized (obviously) by decreasing the problem space of the 2nd array. But same O(n^2) complexity.

def bubble(arr):
    l = len(arr)        
    for a in range(l):
        for b in range(l-1):
            if (arr[a] < arr[b]):
            arr[a], arr[b] = arr[b], arr[a]
    return arr 
Answered By: Waqas

I am a fresh fresh beginner, started to read about Python yesterday.
Inspired by your example I created something maybe more in the 80-ties style, but nevertheless it kinda works

lista1 = [12, 5, 13, 8, 9, 65]

i=0
while i < len(lista1)-1:
    if lista1[i] > lista1[i+1]:
        x = lista1[i]
        lista1[i] = lista1[i+1]
        lista1[i+1] = x
        i=0
        continue
    else:
        i+=1

print(lista1)
Answered By: Igor

The problem with the original algorithm is that if you had a lower number further in the list, it would not bring it to the correct sorted position. The program needs to go back the the beginning each time to ensure that the numbers sort all the way through.

I simplified the code and it will now work for any list of numbers regardless of the list and even if there are repeating numbers. Here’s the code

mylist = [9, 8, 5, 4, 12, 1, 7, 5, 2]
print mylist

def bubble(badList):
    length = len(badList) - 1
    element = 0
    while element < length:
        if badList[element] > badList[element + 1]:
            hold = badList[element + 1]
            badList[element + 1] = badList[element]
            badList[element] = hold
            element = 0
            print badList
        else:
            element = element + 1

print bubble(mylist)
Answered By: weinberg
def bubble_sort(l):
    exchanged = True
    iteration = 0
    n = len(l)

    while(exchanged):
        iteration += 1
        exchanged = False

        # Move the largest element to the end of the list
        for i in range(n-1):
            if l[i] > l[i+1]:
                exchanged = True
                l[i], l[i+1] = l[i+1], l[i]
        n -= 1   # Largest element already towards the end

    print 'Iterations: %s' %(iteration)
    return l
Answered By: Zile Rehman
def bubbleSort(alist):
if len(alist) <= 1:
    return alist
for i in range(0,len(alist)):
   print "i is :%d",i
   for j in range(0,i):
      print "j is:%d",j
      print "alist[i] is :%d, alist[j] is :%d"%(alist[i],alist[j])
      if alist[i] > alist[j]:
         alist[i],alist[j] = alist[j],alist[i]
return alist

alist = [54,26,93,17,77,31,44,55,20,-23,-34,16,11,11,11]

print bubbleSort(alist)

Answered By: pythonnewbie
def bubble_sort(a):
    t = 0
    sorted = False # sorted = False because we have not began to sort
    while not sorted:
    sorted = True # Assume sorted = True first, it will switch only there is any change
        for key in range(1,len(a)):
            if a[key-1] > a[key]:
                sorted = False
                t = a[key-1]; a[key-1] = a[key]; a[key] = t;
    print a
Answered By: pinkopink

A simpler example:

a = len(alist)-1
while a > 0:
    for b in range(0,a):
        #compare with the adjacent element
        if alist[b]>=alist[b+1]:
            #swap both elements
            alist[b], alist[b+1] = alist[b+1], alist[b]
    a-=1

This simply takes the elements from 0 to a(basically, all the unsorted elements in that round) and compares it with its adjacent element, and making a swap if it is greater than its adjacent element. At the end the round, the last element is sorted, and the process runs again without it, until all elements have been sorted.

There is no need for a condition whether sort is true or not.

Note that this algorithm takes into consideration the position of the numbers only when swapping, so repeated numbers will not affect it.

PS. I know it has been very long since this question was posted, but I just wanted to share this idea.

Answered By: txsaw1
def bubble_sort(li):
    l = len(li)
    tmp = None
    sorted_l = sorted(li)
    while (li != sorted_l):
        for ele in range(0,l-1):
            if li[ele] > li[ele+1]:
                tmp = li[ele+1]
                li[ele+1] = li [ele]
                li[ele] = tmp
    return li
Answered By: Rocky
def bubbleSort ( arr ):
    swapped = True 
    length = len ( arr )
    j = 0

    while swapped:
        swapped = False
        j += 1 
        for i in range ( length  - j ):
            if arr [ i ] > arr [ i + 1 ]:
                # swap
                tmp = arr [ i ]
                arr [ i ] = arr [ i + 1]
                arr [ i + 1 ] = tmp 

                swapped = True

if __name__ == '__main__':
    # test list
    a = [ 67, 45, 39, -1, -5, -44 ];

    print ( a )
    bubbleSort ( a )
    print ( a )
Answered By: aldo núñez


def bubbleSort(a):
def swap(x, y):
temp = a[x]
a[x] = a[y]
a[y] = temp
#outer loop
for j in range(len(a)):
#slicing to the center, inner loop, python style
for i in range(j, len(a) - j):
#find the min index and swap
if a[i] < a[j]:
swap(j, i)
#find the max index and swap
if a[i] > a[len(a) - j - 1]:
swap(len(a) - j - 1, i)
return a

Answered By: Nik Radaev
def bubblesort(array):
    for i in range(len(array)-1):
        for j in range(len(array)-1-i):
            if array[j] > array[j+1]:
                array[j], array[j+1] = array[j+1], array[j]
    return(array)

print(bubblesort([3,1,6,2,5,4]))
Answered By: Luke Willey

Try this

a = int(input("Enter Limit"))


val = []

for z in range(0,a):
    b = int(input("Enter Number in List"))
    val.append(b)


for y in range(0,len(val)):
   for x in range(0,len(val)-1):
       if val[x]>val[x+1]:
           t = val[x]
           val[x] = val[x+1]
           val[x+1] = t

print(val)
Answered By: vivek shinde

idk if this might help you after 9 years…
its a simple bubble sort program

    l=[1,6,3,7,5,9,8,2,4,10]

    for i in range(1,len(l)):
        for j in range (i+1,len(l)):
            if l[i]>l[j]:
                l[i],l[j]=l[j],l[i]
Answered By: Santhosh
def merge_bubble(arr):
    k = len(arr)
    while k>2:
        for i in range(0,k-1):
            for j in range(0,k-1):
                if arr[j] > arr[j+1]:
                    arr[j],arr[j+1] = arr[j+1],arr[j]

        return arr
        break
    else:
        if arr[0] > arr[1]:
            arr[0],arr[1] = arr[1],arr[0]
        return arr 
Answered By: user11689497
def bubble_sort(l):
    for i in range(len(l) -1):
        for j in range(len(l)-i-1):
            if l[j] > l[j+1]:
                l[j],l[j+1] = l[j+1], l[j]
    return l
Answered By: Amandeep Singh
arr = [5,4,3,1,6,8,10,9] # array not sorted

for i in range(len(arr)):
    for j in range(i, len(arr)):
        if(arr[i] > arr[j]):
            arr[i], arr[j] = arr[j], arr[i]

            print (arr)
Answered By: user1464878

I consider adding my solution because ever solution here is having

  1. greater time
  2. greater space complexity
  3. or doing too much operations

then is should be

So, here is my solution:


def countInversions(arr):
    count = 0
    n = len(arr)
    for i in range(n):
        _count = count
        for j in range(0, n - i - 1):
            if arr[j] > arr[j + 1]:
                count += 1
                arr[j], arr[j + 1] = arr[j + 1], arr[j]
        if _count == count:
            break
    return count
Answered By: Akshat Tamrakar

If anyone is interested in a shorter implementation using a list comprehension:

def bubble_sort(lst: list) -> None:
    [swap_items(lst, i, i+1) for left in range(len(lst)-1, 0, -1) for i in range(left) if lst[i] > lst[i+1]]


def swap_items(lst: list, pos1: int, pos2: int) -> None:
    lst[pos1], lst[pos2] = lst[pos2], lst[pos1]
Answered By: Liram Zarrouk

Here is a different variation of bubble sort without for loop. Basically you are considering the lastIndex of the array and slowly decrementing it until it first index of the array.

The algorithm will continue to move through the array like this until an entire pass is made without any swaps occurring.

The bubble is sort is basically Quadratic Time: O(n²) when it comes to performance.

class BubbleSort: 
  def __init__(self, arr):
    self.arr = arr;

  def bubbleSort(self):
    count = 0;
    lastIndex = len(self.arr) - 1;
    
    while(count < lastIndex):
      if(self.arr[count] > self.arr[count + 1]):
        self.swap(count)  
      count = count + 1;

      if(count == lastIndex):
        count = 0;
        lastIndex = lastIndex - 1;   

  def swap(self, count):
    temp = self.arr[count];
    self.arr[count] = self.arr[count + 1];
    self.arr[count + 1] = temp;
    
arr = [9, 1, 5, 3, 8, 2]
p1 = BubbleSort(arr)

print(p1.bubbleSort())
Answered By: Thalaivar
def bubble_sorted(arr:list):
    while True:
        for i in range(0,len(arr)-1):
            count = 0
            if arr[i] > arr[i+1]:
                count += 1
                arr[i], arr[i+1] = arr[i+1], arr[i]
        if count == 0:
            break
    return arr
arr = [30,20,80,40,50,10,60,70,90]
print(bubble_sorted(arr))
#[20, 30, 40, 50, 10, 60, 70, 80, 90]
Answered By: Luffy
def bubblesort(L,s):
    if s >-1 :
        bubblesort(L,s-1)
        for i in range(len(L)-1-s):
            if L[i]>L[i+1]:
                temp = L[i+1]
                L[i+1] = L[i]
                L[i] = temp

    return L

Nlist = [3,50,7,1,8,11,9,0,-1,5]
print(bubblesort(Nlist,len(Nlist)))
Answered By: Sar ibra

from random import shuffle
a = [*range(10)]
shuffle(a)
print(a, ‘n’ * 3)
no_of_times_looped = 0
while True:
is_list_sorted = False
no_of_times_looped += 1
for i in range(len(a)-1):
if a[i] > a[i + 1]:
a[i], a[i + 1] = a[i + 1], a[i]
is_list_sorted = True
if not is_list_sorted:
break
print(a)

Answered By: M B NAVEEEN