Sort in descending order without using built-in sort function

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Create a function file that accepts a vector of any length and return a vector whose elements are arranged in descending order. For the function name and arguments use b = dowsort(a) where a is the input vector and b is the output vector. Do not use the MATLAB built-in sort function.
I only have code that has sort function as of the moment.
  7 Comments
John Doe
John Doe on 22 Oct 2021
Edited: John Doe on 22 Oct 2021
So how can I fix it? What do I need to do to make it do what I want it to do in the first place?
Is there a simplier code that I can do?
Bjorn Gustavsson
Bjorn Gustavsson on 22 Oct 2021
Calm and steady. Read my message carefully. Test and try.
  • If you dont want the message "b = 9" written in the command-window. Then you can remove it
  • Either by taking action to the information in "When you execute a expression without an ending semicolon the results of the expression is printed in the command-window."
  • Or by adressing the how you "variable that you define as the output argument, b".
Functions should in principle return something of interest such that they can be reused again and again. This function you write to pass a programming exercise so that general objective is not that clearly in focus - but is still something you should learn to keep in mind (for what use would you be interested in the value of b?)

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Answers (1)

Steven Lord
Steven Lord on 22 Oct 2021
Your code does not satisfy the requirements of the assignment. The problem statement says:
Create a function file that accepts a vector of any length and return a vector whose elements are arranged in descending order.
Your function displays the sorted vector and returns the value of the temporary variable the for loop uses to iterate over the array.
I would omit the disp call because what if the user of your code calls it inside a loop that iterates a thousand or a million times? Do they expect or want your code to display a thousand or a million vectors? Probably not.
Right now your code operates on the vector a that it received as input. That's fine to do inside your function (generally speaking, whatever you do in your function's workspace doesn't affect anything outside its workspace until you return something from your function.) Since your assignment constrains what you're allowed to call the output argument you probably want to assign the vector on which your code operated to the required variable name at the end, just before the function returns.
x = 1:10
y = x % now y is the same as x
If this weren't an assignment I'd probably just use the same variable name as the input and output arguments.
function a = dowsort(a)

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