Considering you wanted to keep your code structure the same, I will show you two possible solutions. In a C fashion, you can use a pointer to a pointer to update your head and tail pointers. Or, in C++ you can pass your head and tail pointers by reference. Personally, in C++ I would make a LinkedList class that keeps track of your head and tail nodes though.
Passing pointer by reference (C++)
In order to pass your pointer by reference, first change your insertNode
declaration,
void insertNode(BuenoList *&tail, int _id);
Next, change your insertNode
definition with the same function arguments. That is it, your code should work now. This minute change works, because your tail
node in the insertNode
function is aliased with the tail
node in your main
function.
Passing pointer by pointer (C)
I know you put a C++ tag, but you can also update your head
and tail
nodes using a more C like method. First, in the main function, you will need to declare BuenoHead
and BuenoTail
as a pointer to a pointer.
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
BuenoList* BuenoListing = new BuenoList;
BuenoListing->value = 1;
BuenoListing->prev = NULL;
BuenoListing->next = NULL;
BuenoList** BuenoHead = new BuenoList*;
BuenoList** BuenoTail = new BuenoList*;
*BuenoHead = BuenoListing;
*BuenoTail = BuenoListing;
insertNode(BuenoTail, 2); // Add value 2 to the list
insertNode(BuenoTail, 3); // Add value 3 to the list
return 0;
}
Then you need to update the insertNode
function declaration to take a pointer to a pointer.
void insertNode(BuenoList** tail, int _id);
Then, you need to update the function definition to deference your pointer to a pointer correctly,
void insertNode(BuenoList** tail, int _id)
{
BuenoList* temp = new BuenoList;
temp->value = _id;
temp->prev = *tail;
temp->next = NULL;
(*tail)->next = temp;
*tail = temp;
}
EDIT
Deleting a node
You modified your question, asking for help on deleting a node. You have several problems with your deleteNode
function.
- You mix
new
with free
. Whenever you allocate with new
, you should correspondingly use delete
.
- You call
temp->prev
without checking whether temp
could be NULL
or not.
- You need to change the function arguments to include your
head
pointer. It might turn out the node you want to delete is the head of your linked list. If so, you'll need to update the head node accordingly.
- You need to check whether the node you are deleting is in the middle of the list, the head of the list, the tail of the list, or if is is the only node of the list. Each of these cases requires different operations to update your linked list.
Considering this is a university assignment, I don't want to give you the full blown solution. Here is a partially modified deleteNode
function. I left some parts for you to fill out though. Hopefully that helps. Maybe next time focus the question a bit more, so I don't have to give a partial solution.
void deleteNode(BuenoList*& tail, BuenoList*& head, int _id) {
BuenoList* toDelete;
toDelete = tail;
// Traverse list and find node to delete
while( ( toDelete != NULL ) && ( toDelete->value != _id ) ) {
toDelete = toDelete->prev;
}
// If node not found, return
if( toDelete == NULL ) {
std::cout << "ERROR KEY DOES NOT EXIST\n";
return;
}
// Check to see if node to delete is tail
if( toDelete == tail ) {
if( toDelete->prev != NULL ) {
tail = toDelete->prev;
tail->next = NULL;
} else { //Deleting only node in list
tail = NULL;
head = NULL;
}
delete toDelete;
return;
}
// Check to see if node to delete is head
if( toDelete == head ) {
// FILL OUT WHAT TO DO HERE
return;
}
// Node to delete is neither head nor tail.
// FILL OUT WHAT TO DO HERE
return;
}