On 2019-04-20 00:24, DL Neil wrote:
On 20/04/19 4:41 AM, Rob Gaddi wrote:
On 4/19/19 12:23 AM, Sayth Renshaw wrote:
On Friday, 19 April 2019 17:01:33 UTC+10, Sayth Renshaw wrote:
Set the first item in the list as the current largest.
Compare each subsequent integer to the first.
if this element is larger, set integer.
def maxitwo(listarg):
myMax = listarg[0]
for item in listarg:
if item > myMax:
myMax = item
return myMax
When you understand what it is you intend to write (barring DL Neil's
comments), and THEN write it, you write the correct thing. Thus endith
the lesson.
+1, Rob's guidance saves time and embarrassment...
[snip]
Regarding 'optimisation': rather than 'disappearing' into high-volume
and 'exotic' situations (see earlier comment), why not stick with the
simple stuff? For example, once 'max' is initialised, is there a need to
compare max with 'list[ 0 ]'?
Is that really a problem?
How would you avoid comparing the initial max with list[0]? By slicing
the list? By using 'iter' and 'next'? Do you expect that doing either of
those to avoid a single comparison would make it faster? Is a comparison
very expensive?
You could, of course, do some benchmarks to see if it makes a
difference, but, personally, I'd just leave it.
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