Insertion Sort In Python Explained (With Example And Code)

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2020
  • Insertion Sort is a simple sorting algorithm with quadratic running time.
    This video is part of the basic algorithms in Python playlist. The goal is to get an understanding of basic computer science algorithms and their implementation in Python.
    For more coding videos subscribe to my youtube channel.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 112

  • @Meow_off
    @Meow_off Před 3 lety +65

    Absolutely beautiful ,a simple and concise explanation ,Wish I had teachers like you.

  • @troyke
    @troyke Před rokem +13

    OMG! I've only watched a few mins of your video and I can't believe what a great job you did on the explanation and the beauty, pace, and clarity of the presentation! Top-notch! You really need to continue being a Tech Trainer either FT or on the side, as you are VERY GOOD at it!

  • @saralee548
    @saralee548 Před 2 lety +5

    ive been using your channel to study for coding interviews, most simple explanations out there, ty!

  • @heyitsKim1912
    @heyitsKim1912 Před rokem +1

    I found this coding example is the easiest yet most efficient one out there! Thank you Felix!

  • @deshawnbattle7510
    @deshawnbattle7510 Před 2 lety +2

    I’m reading a book for school and the problem had 2x as much code wayyyyy harder than it had to be… thanks man!!

  • @glockncheese
    @glockncheese Před 3 lety +2

    This is literally a lifesaver. Thank u.

  • @nishantmehra7031
    @nishantmehra7031 Před 3 lety +5

    You made this look so easy dude ... thanks a lot

  • @olafschlammbeutel
    @olafschlammbeutel Před 4 lety +3

    Really nice and clean code! Good work!

  • @kiranvarghese6046
    @kiranvarghese6046 Před 2 lety +2

    thanks a lot for this simple code man .......a lot of sites on the internet had to many complicated codes but this one was small and simple :)

  • @jiaziliang5143
    @jiaziliang5143 Před 2 lety +2

    Very clear explanation, thank you so much!

  • @WriterRomanSavin
    @WriterRomanSavin Před rokem

    A perfect explanation and elegant coding solution

  • @cigxhang486
    @cigxhang486 Před 2 lety

    only till I watched this video did I know that there are two loops, one to the right and one to the left. Thank you for saving my life

  • @tejaswini07j
    @tejaswini07j Před rokem

    I have been running away from this Sorting and Searching since 2011(Pre University Years), I am in the 6th year of my career and TIL "SORTING", which is simple and non-scary.
    Thank you!

  • @sirenhanced6248
    @sirenhanced6248 Před 2 lety +1

    I LOVE YOU SO MUCH MAN YOU'RE A LIFESAVER WISH ME LUCK I HAVE AN EXAM ON TUESDAY

  • @Jonzy6ixx
    @Jonzy6ixx Před 4 měsíci

    ❤❤❤❤ the simplest video have seen so far that made this so simple. I have watched dozens of videos at a point I said I will never use insertions sort 😅

  • @yeleukenov
    @yeleukenov Před měsícem

    Eloquent, beautiful. Thanks

  • @toshans845
    @toshans845 Před 11 měsíci

    please make more videos like this for more concepts like Job scheduling with Greedy method , Knapsack problems, Travelling salesman Problems etc , it will be very useful for many tech enthusiasts 🙏🏻

  • @badboy333666999
    @badboy333666999 Před rokem

    Brilliant explanation. Thank you!

  • @TheKorkahn
    @TheKorkahn Před 4 lety +6

    Very nice, just what I needed, thanks!

  • @jimmadjy
    @jimmadjy Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you man . Best explanation , easy to understand

  • @abianand949
    @abianand949 Před 2 lety

    very Informative and simple.. Loved your explanation..

  • @bhavishahadiyal7836
    @bhavishahadiyal7836 Před 3 lety +3

    Thankyou it's really great keep it up:)

  • @challasomesh2397
    @challasomesh2397 Před rokem

    Perfect explanation, Thank you sir!

  • @dkadayinthailand3082
    @dkadayinthailand3082 Před rokem +15

    Is there any reason you would want to use this instead of the built in sort function in Python?

    • @nosi851
      @nosi851 Před 5 měsíci +8

      my stupid ass teacher wants us to think of solutions instead

    • @user-xr7ub4xo3u
      @user-xr7ub4xo3u Před 5 měsíci +5

      If you ever want to be a programmer then there's a need to make your own functions algorithm with your own brain not by just copying some one else's work

    • @elemeismo7810
      @elemeismo7810 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Job interviews

    • @Jonzy6ixx
      @Jonzy6ixx Před 4 měsíci

      I was about to ask the same

    • @darcash1738
      @darcash1738 Před 4 měsíci

      Timsort op. Look into its implementation, that’s why it’s built in. Done v intelligently

  • @Nickgaming19
    @Nickgaming19 Před rokem

    Thanks brother, This helped me a lot

  • @g__red
    @g__red Před rokem

    very good explanation and very understandable code!

  • @DanielSmith-uj7rr
    @DanielSmith-uj7rr Před 2 lety

    Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!

  • @lena-ck9wz
    @lena-ck9wz Před 4 lety +10

    thank you for explaining this in a simple way 🙏🏼

  • @PrajithPS-oj4rj
    @PrajithPS-oj4rj Před 4 měsíci

    thanks a lot brother!

  • @atkbane
    @atkbane Před 11 měsíci

    muy buena explicacion, gracias por el video

  • @johnmahugu
    @johnmahugu Před 13 dny +1

    brilliant!!!

  • @plusinfinity3251
    @plusinfinity3251 Před 3 lety

    Good explanation 👏👍

  • @RamRam-jp2kc
    @RamRam-jp2kc Před rokem

    best video on youtube.

  • @devendravyas328
    @devendravyas328 Před měsícem

    Be continue bro.

  • @devansh6839
    @devansh6839 Před rokem

    a good explanation!

  • @cheerslove9975
    @cheerslove9975 Před 2 lety

    Thank you man

  • @cr1064
    @cr1064 Před rokem

    Thank you!!

  • @ryanboll9464
    @ryanboll9464 Před 8 měsíci

    New to coding. Curious why you used i in your for loop and then set j to i instead of just using j to iterate through?

  • @jorgeluismadridgomez1643
    @jorgeluismadridgomez1643 Před 2 lety +2

    I was told that in insertion sort we don't make a swap and we only move the elements greater than the current to the right next position until we reach the current correct position. Does that explanation make sense? or the swap action is the same that the shift action?

    • @sahilshukla8619
      @sahilshukla8619 Před 2 lety +2

      Left shifting a digit one by one is equivalent to swapping the digit on left hand side one by one

  • @sambhavbhalla2697
    @sambhavbhalla2697 Před 3 lety +2

    Hey , I had a doubt cuz when I wrote this code it was showing list index out of range also why did we do j=-1 , if we are going from left to right so we are increasing the index we aren't going from right to left?

    • @prashantpareek5863
      @prashantpareek5863 Před 3 lety +17

      the reason why j = j -1 is used is probably because,in this algo the elements to the left are always sorted before we move further(towards right),for example
      li = [2,6,5,1,3,4]
      here we start the for loop from index 1 i.e from the number '6' and check if the number to the left of '6' is greater than 6,if it is we swap and since 2 is not greater than 6, we do not swap, and since, we do not swap j = j-1 doesn't get triggered in the loop ,now we move further and now j = 2 (since, j = i),we check if the number '6' is greater than the next number, which is '5',since it is,we enter the for loop and swap these two, now as we know j is equal to 2,and we need to check if the number we just swapped is also greater than the number which is left of this newly swapped number, so, we are checking if the number '5' which just now came in the place of '6', is also greater than the number '2',to check this we decrement j by one and since it is decremented, now, j again checks if the number to the left is smaller than the number present at j, since, '5' is greater than '2', no swapping takes place. But as we move, j is equal to 3,and we check if the number to the left of '1', is greater than '1' (mind you,now the li looks like this li = [2,5,6,1,3,4])
      since '6' is greater than '1', we swap now the array looks like this li = [2,5,1,6,3,4],as i had told you in the beginning that this algo always has the elemente in the left soretd before it moves forward,but you can see that the array to the left of 3 is not sorted,coz '1' is in the middle when it should be at the beginning, so, we decrease j to 2 again and check if the number to the left of '1' is greater than '1' since,5 is greater than '1' we swap since a swap has happened we further decrease j to 1 and check if the number to the left of '1' is greater than '1' since '2' is greater we swap and we get li = [1,2,5,6,3,4], now we move further in the same way.

    • @thomasjefferson6225
      @thomasjefferson6225 Před 2 lety +2

      @@prashantpareek5863 this should have more likes. basically j is an index used to know how many comparisions needs to be done for each key.

  • @chandrasekharparimi1167
    @chandrasekharparimi1167 Před 4 měsíci

    superb master

  • @sanooosai
    @sanooosai Před 3 měsíci +1

    thank you

  • @rajrish
    @rajrish Před 2 měsíci +2

    I found your code simple but but i dont think it is the correct example of insertion sort. bcz in insertion sort, we pick one element and put it to its correct location, but you kept swapping the element with the previous element until the previous element is not smaller than our main element. So it is technically an example of bubble sort that is executed in the reverse direction. You won't get what im trying to say just by reading my sentence. Therefore look at this example of insertion sort :
    l1 = [5,1,3,4,2]
    n = len(l1)
    for i in range(n):
    k = l1[i]
    j = i-1
    while k=0 :
    l1[j+1] = l1[j]
    j -= 1
    else:
    l1[j+1] = k
    print('Sorted list: ', l1)

  • @helpapproved
    @helpapproved Před 2 lety

    tq bro .

  • @mohankarthik9619
    @mohankarthik9619 Před rokem

    Can you explain the condition used in program

  • @SuperBhavanishankar
    @SuperBhavanishankar Před 3 lety +2

    Hi. can this even more simpler version works? -->
    for i in range(0,len(lst)):
    while (lst[i-1]>lst[i] and i>0):
    lst[i-1],lst[i]=lst[i],lst[i-1]
    i-=1
    print(lst)

    • @nvrbck
      @nvrbck Před 2 lety +2

      he defined a function and you didnt

  • @rudripancholifc
    @rudripancholifc Před 2 lety

    Love from prayagraj

  • @bmk2561
    @bmk2561 Před 9 měsíci

    can someone explain whats j=i used for

  • @chasest.claire9853
    @chasest.claire9853 Před rokem

    why would you call a for loop, which is slower iirc, instead of maybe append value to list then just call the sort on the array? I’m still learning efficiency

  • @jonassteinberg3779
    @jonassteinberg3779 Před 4 měsíci

    aside from readability, which in this case I don't think is a win, you don't need to even define j because if you think about it j is just i, so the code could be written as:
    def iterative_insertion_sort(arr: list):
    for i in range(1, len(arr)):
    while arr[i-1] > arr[i] and i > 0:
    arr[i-1], arr[i] = arr[i], arr[i-1]
    i -= 1
    This code block passes all my unit tests of which I have 14. I'll list them below. One thing Felix does which I haven't seen anyone else do is instead of comparing right to left he actually compares left to right. I guess it doesn't matter. My mind makes easier send of things as right to left, especially since you're counting down *to the left* in terms of comparisons. Anyway...no need for j.
    from iterative_insertion_sort import iterative_insertion_sort
    import pytest
    def test_alternating_zeroes_and_ones():
    arr = [0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_increasing_decreasing():
    arr = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_decreasing_increasing():
    arr = [19, 18, 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1] + list(range(1, 20))
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_all_but_one_element_the_same():
    arr = [0] * 19 + [1]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_all_but_one_element_the_same_big_delta():
    arr = [1] * 19 + [100]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_large_range():
    arr = [-100] + list(range(1, 20))
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_very_close_numbers():
    arr = [i/10 for i in range(20)]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_all_negative_numbers():
    arr = list(range(0, -5, -1))
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_mix_of_positive_and_negative():
    arr = [-10, 10] * 10
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_alternating_high_and_low():
    arr = [20 - i if i % 2 == 0 else i for i in range(20)]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_peak_in_the_middle():
    arr = [2] * 10 + [3] + [2] * 9
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_small_range_random_integers():
    arr = [5, 3, 0, 4, 0, 4, 4, 0, 4, 0, 0, 0, 0, 4, 1, 0, 1, 4, 3, 5]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_floating_point_numbers():
    arr = [float(i) for i in range(20)]
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)
    def test_large_value_at_the_beginning():
    arr = [1000] + list(range(1, 20))
    assert iterative_insertion_sort(arr) == sorted(arr)

  • @user-uy5oy5kq7p
    @user-uy5oy5kq7p Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks

  • @peachfreude
    @peachfreude Před 2 lety

    how to print number 1,2,3,4,5 in ascending then descending order in a same line? the output should be 1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1. can you help?

    • @Game-nr3sr
      @Game-nr3sr Před rokem +1

      do reverse list and then join this from 1::

  • @oneloveafrica8860
    @oneloveafrica8860 Před rokem

    wow it working🥳

  • @kanikapanwar7305
    @kanikapanwar7305 Před rokem

    Thank u

  • @NOM855
    @NOM855 Před rokem

    i have a question
    why u'v used while instead we can use for like that :
    def tri_insertion(L):
    for i in range(1,len(l)):
    for j in range(len(l[:i])):
    if l[i]

  • @hadrian2801
    @hadrian2801 Před rokem

    Why does j need to be used, cant i just be used instead?

  • @clumsySenpai
    @clumsySenpai Před 2 lety +1

    I trust you and your console.

  • @shahriarshovo3382
    @shahriarshovo3382 Před 3 lety +1

    may you explain more about j=j-1 ? should it decreasing from last element ?

    • @prashantpareek5863
      @prashantpareek5863 Před 3 lety +8

      the reason why j = j -1 is used is probably because,in this algo the elements to the left are always sorted before we move further(towards right),for example
      li = [2,6,5,1,3,4]
      here we start the for loop from index 1 i.e from the number '6' and check if the number to the left of '6' is greater than 6,if it is we swap and since 2 is not greater than 6, we do not swap, and since, we do not swap j = j-1 doesn't get triggered in the loop ,now we move further and now j = 2 (since, j = i),we check if the number '6' is greater than the next number, which is '5',since it is,we enter the for loop and swap these two, now as we know j is equal to 2,and we need to check if the number we just swapped is also greater than the number which is left of this newly swapped number, so, we are checking if the number '5' which just now came in the place of '6', is also greater than the number '2',to check this we decrement j by one and since it is decremented, now, j again checks if the number to the left is smaller than the number present at j, since, '5' is greater than '2', no swapping takes place. But as we move, j is equal to 3,and we check if the number to the left of '1', is greater than '1' (mind you,now the li looks like this li = [2,5,6,1,3,4])
      since '6' is greater than '1', we swap now the array looks like this li = [2,5,1,6,3,4],as i had told you in the beginning that this algo always has the elemente in the left soretd before it moves forward,but you can see that the array to the left of 3 is not sorted,coz '1' is in the middle when it should be at the beginning, so, we decrease j to 2 again and check if the number to the left of '1' is greater than '1' since,5 is greater than '1' we swap since a swap has happened we further decrease j to 1 and check if the number to the left of '1' is greater than '1' since '2' is greater we swap and we get li = [1,2,5,6,3,4], now we move further in the same way.

    • @shahriarshovo3382
      @shahriarshovo3382 Před 3 lety +2

      @@prashantpareek5863 Thank you so much ❤️

    • @prashantpareek5863
      @prashantpareek5863 Před 3 lety +1

      @@shahriarshovo3382 I hope the doubt was cleared.. 👍

    • @shahriarshovo3382
      @shahriarshovo3382 Před 3 lety +1

      @@prashantpareek5863 yes . :D

    • @prashantpareek5863
      @prashantpareek5863 Před 2 lety

      @@shahriarshovo3382 hey, Hi, are you Shariar from Dennis Ivy's course? The guy who did the front end of the Devsearch project?

  • @ignitedminds6164
    @ignitedminds6164 Před 5 měsíci

    Sir continue the series in leetcode

  • @arhamatif2943
    @arhamatif2943 Před rokem

    hey can u give the code so i can copy and paste cause mine's not working

  • @holmbrg-_-2221
    @holmbrg-_-2221 Před 4 měsíci

    Why do you need to define a new variable j? You can just ignore j and use i. Am i wrong?

  • @mountainp800
    @mountainp800 Před 2 lety

    How does this have better presentation than my online university?

  • @jacobsola3521
    @jacobsola3521 Před 11 měsíci

    Noice.

  • @DimaCleann
    @DimaCleann Před 4 měsíci

    why did we check if j is greater than zero ? we start the loop from zero

  • @burnertrump875
    @burnertrump875 Před 2 lety

    Does this work with numbers larger than 9?

  • @lakshyadhiman2061
    @lakshyadhiman2061 Před 2 lety

    😎🤝

  • @mariusbaldovin4959
    @mariusbaldovin4959 Před 3 měsíci

    There is actually an item at index -1 and it is the last element from the list

  • @marwasolh9449
    @marwasolh9449 Před rokem

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @diyafathimadiyafathima.k5494
    @diyafathimadiyafathima.k5494 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Can anyone explain why we put the j-=1?

    • @strade740
      @strade740 Před 5 měsíci

      j -= 1 means j = j - 1 it is done so that we keep on comparing the value with the left value until the while loop condition become wrong
      too late haha, but i hope u have already figured it out!

  • @x0fficial
    @x0fficial Před 10 měsíci

    Super good!

  • @KRISH3russ
    @KRISH3russ Před rokem +1

    i caN Trust you now sir

  • @Phlypour
    @Phlypour Před rokem

    All is fine, but I'm not sure why did you create a 'j' that is 'i'? I removed the 'j' variable and the result is just the same. Is it due to some common or PEP practices or a different Python version?

    • @g__red
      @g__red Před rokem

      I think that if you do not write "j = i" what happens is that the while loop starts from the beginning of the list each time (it goes to the right and then to the left for each iteration) so it's less efficient, whereas with "j = i" it starts at "i" position and goes backwards thanks to "j -= 1".

    • @lentlen5857
      @lentlen5857 Před rokem

      this algorithm is not insertion sort algo ...
      this IS an Insertion sort :
      def insertion(d):
      for i in range(1,len(d)):
      key = d[i]
      j = i-1
      while j >= 0 and key

    • @lentlen5857
      @lentlen5857 Před rokem

      I mean the algorithm in the video is NOT an insertion sort algorithm

  • @KashishYadav657
    @KashishYadav657 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Not showing the output

  • @guilhermebarnes7663
    @guilhermebarnes7663 Před 2 lety +1

    This seems like an inefficient bubble sort algo

  • @pianocoversjulian1008
    @pianocoversjulian1008 Před 2 lety

    Better and shorter than the one of my teacher 👌😅

  • @lebu8769
    @lebu8769 Před 3 lety +1

    I didn't knew that Felix had started a programming channel apart from his PEWDIEPIE channel.
    But my doubt, is why is he having so less SUBSCRIBERS.........
    😂

  • @starlight_garden
    @starlight_garden Před rokem +4

    Timestamps/suggested chapters:
    0:00 Intro
    0:08 Overview
    0:31 Example
    3:21 Code
    7:44 Outro

  • @baby_doll4.13
    @baby_doll4.13 Před 2 lety

    insertion sort perform shift operations rather than swap.

  • @factaboutindia7243
    @factaboutindia7243 Před rokem +1

    this code is not worked

  • @cleverarsey3568
    @cleverarsey3568 Před rokem +1

    if anyone else is here cuz of faris foo like this comment

  • @mohamedshiraf2855
    @mohamedshiraf2855 Před rokem

    Thanks