Example Sweep 1 Float 2 Cat No Repeats

"""Auto-generated example: 1 Float, 2 Categorical (no repeats)."""

import math

import bencher as bn

class SortAnalysis(bn.ParametrizedSweep):
    """Sort analysis across size, algorithm, and data distribution."""

    array_size = bn.FloatSweep(default=100, bounds=[10, 10000], doc="Array length")
    algorithm = bn.StringSweep(["quicksort", "mergesort", "heapsort"], doc="Sort algorithm")
    distribution = bn.StringSweep(["uniform", "sorted", "reversed"], doc="Data distribution")

    time = bn.ResultFloat(units="ms", doc="Sort duration")

    def benchmark(self):
        algo_factor = {"quicksort": 1.0, "mergesort": 1.2, "heapsort": 1.5}[self.algorithm]
        dist_factor = {"uniform": 1.0, "sorted": 0.6, "reversed": 1.8}[self.distribution]
        self.time = algo_factor * dist_factor * self.array_size * math.log2(self.array_size + 1) * 0.001


def example_sweep_1_float_2_cat_no_repeats(run_cfg: bn.BenchRunCfg | None = None) -> bn.Bench:
    """1 Float, 2 Categorical (no repeats)."""
    bench = SortAnalysis().to_bench(run_cfg)
    bench.plot_sweep(input_vars=['array_size', 'algorithm', 'distribution'], result_vars=['time'], description='A 1 float + 2 categorical parameter sweep with a single sample per combination. Bencher calculates the Cartesian product of all input variables and evaluates the benchmark function at each point. With no repeats, each combination appears exactly once -- useful for deterministic functions or quick exploration before committing to longer runs. Adding categorical variables to a float sweep creates faceted line plots -- one curve per category, making it easy to compare how each setting modifies the continuous relationship.', post_description='Each tab shows a different view of the same data: interactive plots, tabular summaries, and raw data. Use the tabs to explore the sweep results from different angles.')

    return bench


if __name__ == "__main__":
    bn.run(example_sweep_1_float_2_cat_no_repeats, subsampling_divisions=4)