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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T08:45:37+00:00 2026-05-11T08:45:37+00:00

I’m assuming that the good old qsort function in stdlib is not stable, because

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I’m assuming that the good old qsort function in stdlib is not stable, because the man page doesn’t say anything about it. This is the function I’m talking about:

   #include <stdlib.h>    void qsort(void *base, size_t nmemb, size_t size,               int(*compar)(const void *, const void *));   

I assume that if I change my comparison function to also include the address of that which I’m comparing, it will be stable. Is that correct?

Eg:

int compareFoos( const void* pA, const void *pB ) {     Foo *pFooA = (Foo*) pA;     Foo *pFooB = (Foo*) pB;      if( pFooA->id < pFooB->id ) {         return -1;     } else if( pFooA->id > pFooB->id ) {         return 1;     } else if( pA < pB ) {         return -1;                 } else if( pB > pA ) {        return 1;     } else {        return 0;     } }    
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  1. 2026-05-11T08:45:38+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 8:45 am

    No, you cannot rely on that unfortunately. Let’s assume you have the array (two fields in each record used for checking but only first field used for sorting):

    B,1 B,2 A,3 

    A non-stable sort may compare B,1 with A,3 and swap them, giving:

    A,3 B,2 B,1 

    If the next step were to compare B,2 with B,1, the keys would be the same and, since B,2 has an address less than B,1, no swap will take place. For a stable sort, you should have ended up with:

    A,3 B,1 B,2 

    The only way to do it would be to attach the starting address of the pointer (not its current address) and sort using that as well as the other keys. That way, the original address becomes the minor part of the sort key so that B,1 will eventually end up before B,2 regardless of where the two B lines go during the sorting process.

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