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I'm attempting to implement a sorted linked list with insertion, deletion, and check if integer exists methods and I'm currently having trouble understanding why my insertion method isn't working quite right. It inserts integers into the linked list but they are sorted backwards, I've tried moving around the conditionals but it doesn't work the way it should.

void insert(int x){
    LinkedList newLink = new LinkedList(x);
    if (front == null) {
        front = newLink;
    } else if (x > front.x){
        newLink.next = front;
        front = newLink;
    } else {
        LinkedList current = front.next;
        LinkedList before = front;
        while (current != null){
            if (x < front.x) {
                before = current;
                current = current.next; 
            }
            newLink.next = before.next;
            before.next = newLink;
        }
    } 
}
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  • Well, if x is greater than your current head, then you are prepending it to your list. That's what makes the list sorted in descending order.
    – 5gon12eder
    Dec 7, 2014 at 21:22

4 Answers 4

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I think it will fix your problems, plus, I added some comments for you to understand my changes in your code :

void insert(int x) {
    LinkedList newLink = new LinkedList(x);
    if (front == null) {
        front = newLink;
        // insert in head if x is lower than the head
    } else if (x <= front.x) {
        newLink.next = front;
        front = newLink;
    } else {
        // find the first node which value is lower than x (or the tail)
        LinkedList current;
        for (current = front; current.next != null && x >= current.next.x ; current = current.next);
        // to remove duplicates
        if (x != current.x) {
            newLink.next = current.next;
            current.next = newLink;
        }
    }
}
12
  • I think the conditional in the for loop is preventing me from adding more than 2 integer values, I tried inserting a '1' & '3' and that worked but trying to insert '2' it failed. It is in ascending order now though which helped a ton.
    – kamahl
    Dec 7, 2014 at 21:47
  • How did it fail ? Exception ? Wrong output ?
    – Dici
    Dec 7, 2014 at 22:06
  • I didn't get an exception and it didn't output anything, this is what my console looked like imgur.com/AhwM1Oq I'm using toString(); to output the linked list
    – kamahl
    Dec 7, 2014 at 22:27
  • Could you provide the whole code on PasteBin or CollabEdit ?
    – Dici
    Dec 7, 2014 at 22:30
  • The code of Console does not compile but I will wite my own test class. I will let you know if I find what's wrong
    – Dici
    Dec 7, 2014 at 22:47
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Please find attached my implementation. Please use and modify to your needs.

Attention! This implementation will drop equal values!

/******************************************************************
 * Adds the given string to the sorted list. If the string already
 * is in the list, then the list will not be modified.
 * 
 * @param list The sorted list of strings
 * @param str The string to be inserted if not there already
 * @return Returns true if the list has changed otherwise false
 */
public static boolean
add2SortedList( List<String> list, String str ) {
    int res = 0;

    //--- Loop through list from end to front
    for ( int i = list.size() - 1; i >= 0 ; i-- ) {

        //--- Compare to current entry
        res = str.compareTo( list.get( i ));

        //--- Already in list => return
        if ( res == 0 )
            return false;

        //--- Bigger than current one => insert after
        if ( res > 0 ) {
            list.add( i + 1, str );
            return true;
        }
    }

    //--- Insert at head of list
    list.add( 0, str );
    return true;
}


/******************************************************************
 * Adds the given value to the sorted list if its not already there.
 * 
 * @param list the sorted list of values
 * @param value the value to be inserted if not there already
 * @return returns true when value was added, else false
 */
public static boolean
add2SortedSet( List<Integer> list, Integer value )
{
    int size = list.size();
    for ( int i = 0 ; i < size ; i++ )
    {
        int res = value.compareTo ( list.get( i ));

        //----- Insert before this element
        if ( res < 0 ) {
            list.add( i, value );
            return true ;
        }

        //----- New element already in list
        if ( res == 0 )
            return false ;
    }

    //----- Append to end of list
    list.add ( value );
    return true ;
}
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else if (x > front.x){
    newLink.next = front;
    front = newLink;
}

If the new link is greater than the front, make the new node the front node, and set its next node to the last front. You are inserting at the front of the list in reverse sorted order.

if (x < front.x) {
    before = current;
    current = current.next; 
}

You are always comparing to the front node as well, not your current node.

-1

The default way to insert in a linkedList:

LinkedList<Integer> myList = new LinkedList<>();

myList.add(238);
myList.add(7);
..        
Collections.sort(myList);

http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/LinkedList.html

for a different way to sort use the interface Comparable

1
  • Does not answer the question at all since we are talking about a custom implementation of the linked-list data structure
    – Dici
    Dec 7, 2014 at 22:49

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