Collections.BinarySearch Method

Definition

Overloads

BinarySearch(IList, Object)

Searches the specified list for the specified object using the binary search algorithm.

BinarySearch(IList, Object, IComparator)

Searches the specified list for the specified object using the binary search algorithm.

BinarySearch(IList, Object)

Searches the specified list for the specified object using the binary search algorithm.

[Android.Runtime.Register("binarySearch", "(Ljava/util/List;Ljava/lang/Object;)I", "")]
[Java.Interop.JavaTypeParameters(new System.String[] { "T" })]
public static int BinarySearch (System.Collections.IList list, Java.Lang.Object key);
[<Android.Runtime.Register("binarySearch", "(Ljava/util/List;Ljava/lang/Object;)I", "")>]
[<Java.Interop.JavaTypeParameters(new System.String[] { "T" })>]
static member BinarySearch : System.Collections.IList * Java.Lang.Object -> int

Parameters

list
IList

the list to be searched.

key
Object

the key to be searched for.

Returns

the index of the search key, if it is contained in the list; otherwise, (-(<i>insertion point</i>) - 1). The insertion point is defined as the point at which the key would be inserted into the list: the index of the first element greater than the key, or list.size() if all elements in the list are less than the specified key. Note that this guarantees that the return value will be &gt;= 0 if and only if the key is found.

Attributes

Remarks

Searches the specified list for the specified object using the binary search algorithm. The list must be sorted into ascending order according to the Comparable natural ordering of its elements (as by the #sort(List) method) prior to making this call. If it is not sorted, the results are undefined. If the list contains multiple elements equal to the specified object, there is no guarantee which one will be found.

This method runs in log(n) time for a "random access" list (which provides near-constant-time positional access). If the specified list does not implement the RandomAccess interface and is large, this method will do an iterator-based binary search that performs O(n) link traversals and O(log n) element comparisons.

Java documentation for java.util.Collections.binarySearch(java.util.List<? extends java.lang.Comparable<? super T>>, T).

Portions of this page are modifications based on work created and shared by the Android Open Source Project and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 2.5 Attribution License.

Applies to

BinarySearch(IList, Object, IComparator)

Searches the specified list for the specified object using the binary search algorithm.

[Android.Runtime.Register("binarySearch", "(Ljava/util/List;Ljava/lang/Object;Ljava/util/Comparator;)I", "")]
[Java.Interop.JavaTypeParameters(new System.String[] { "T" })]
public static int BinarySearch (System.Collections.IList list, Java.Lang.Object? key, Java.Util.IComparator? c);
[<Android.Runtime.Register("binarySearch", "(Ljava/util/List;Ljava/lang/Object;Ljava/util/Comparator;)I", "")>]
[<Java.Interop.JavaTypeParameters(new System.String[] { "T" })>]
static member BinarySearch : System.Collections.IList * Java.Lang.Object * Java.Util.IComparator -> int

Parameters

list
IList

the list to be searched.

key
Object

the key to be searched for.

c
IComparator

the comparator by which the list is ordered. A null value indicates that the elements' Comparable natural ordering should be used.

Returns

the index of the search key, if it is contained in the list; otherwise, (-(<i>insertion point</i>) - 1). The insertion point is defined as the point at which the key would be inserted into the list: the index of the first element greater than the key, or list.size() if all elements in the list are less than the specified key. Note that this guarantees that the return value will be &gt;= 0 if and only if the key is found.

Attributes

Remarks

Searches the specified list for the specified object using the binary search algorithm. The list must be sorted into ascending order according to the specified comparator (as by the #sort(List, Comparator) sort(List, Comparator) method), prior to making this call. If it is not sorted, the results are undefined. If the list contains multiple elements equal to the specified object, there is no guarantee which one will be found.

This method runs in log(n) time for a "random access" list (which provides near-constant-time positional access). If the specified list does not implement the RandomAccess interface and is large, this method will do an iterator-based binary search that performs O(n) link traversals and O(log n) element comparisons.

Java documentation for java.util.Collections.binarySearch(java.util.List<? extends T>, T, java.util.Comparator<? super T>).

Portions of this page are modifications based on work created and shared by the Android Open Source Project and used according to terms described in the Creative Commons 2.5 Attribution License.

Applies to