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- Fix syntax errors in skills markdown files (.github/skills, .opencode/skills) - Change typescript to tsx for code blocks with JSX - Replace ellipsis (...) in array examples with valid syntax - Separate CSS from TypeScript into distinct code blocks - Convert JavaScript object examples to valid JSON in docs - Fix enum definitions with proper comma separation
2.2 KiB
2.2 KiB
title, impact, impactDescription, tags
| title | impact | impactDescription | tags |
|---|---|---|---|
| Use Loop for Min/Max Instead of Sort | LOW | O(n) instead of O(n log n) | javascript, arrays, performance, sorting, algorithms |
Use Loop for Min/Max Instead of Sort
Finding the smallest or largest element only requires a single pass through the array. Sorting is wasteful and slower.
Incorrect (O(n log n) - sort to find latest):
interface Project {
id: string;
name: string;
updatedAt: number;
}
function getLatestProject(projects: Project[]) {
const sorted = [...projects].sort((a, b) => b.updatedAt - a.updatedAt);
return sorted[0];
}
Sorts the entire array just to find the maximum value.
Incorrect (O(n log n) - sort for oldest and newest):
function getOldestAndNewest(projects: Project[]) {
const sorted = [...projects].sort((a, b) => a.updatedAt - b.updatedAt);
return { oldest: sorted[0], newest: sorted[sorted.length - 1] };
}
Still sorts unnecessarily when only min/max are needed.
Correct (O(n) - single loop):
function getLatestProject(projects: Project[]) {
if (projects.length === 0) return null;
let latest = projects[0];
for (let i = 1; i < projects.length; i++) {
if (projects[i].updatedAt > latest.updatedAt) {
latest = projects[i];
}
}
return latest;
}
function getOldestAndNewest(projects: Project[]) {
if (projects.length === 0) return { oldest: null, newest: null };
let oldest = projects[0];
let newest = projects[0];
for (let i = 1; i < projects.length; i++) {
if (projects[i].updatedAt < oldest.updatedAt) oldest = projects[i];
if (projects[i].updatedAt > newest.updatedAt) newest = projects[i];
}
return { oldest, newest };
}
Single pass through the array, no copying, no sorting.
Alternative (Math.min/Math.max for small arrays):
const numbers = [5, 2, 8, 1, 9];
const min = Math.min(...numbers);
const max = Math.max(...numbers);
This works for small arrays, but can be slower or just throw an error for very large arrays due to spread operator limitations. Maximal array length is approximately 124000 in Chrome 143 and 638000 in Safari 18; exact numbers may vary - see the fiddle. Use the loop approach for reliability.