0
public boolean isPalindrome()
{

    Stack myStack = new Stack();
    for(Node current = head; current!=null; current = current.next)
    {
        if(!myStack.isEmpty())
        {
            if(myStack.peek()==current.data)
            {
                myStack.pop();
            }else if(current.next!=null&&myStack.peek()==current.next.data)
            {
                continue;
            }
            else
            {
                myStack.push(current.data);
            }
        }else
        {

            myStack.push(current.data);
        }   

    }

    return myStack.isEmpty();
}

What I am doing here is using a stack to check whether a linked list is a palindrome. It works as expected only thing is I wanted to get rid of code duplication where the else condition has a push of the data onto the stack.

2

5 Answers 5

7

The algorithm is unfortunately not correct. For "abbaaa" it would report that that is a palindrome, although it isn't. Checking for palindromes without using the length is difficult.

abbaaa () -> push a
bbaaa (a) -> push b
baaa (ba) -> pop b
aaa (a) -> pop a
aa () -> push a
a (a) -> pop a
() -> palindrome
1
  • I had not considered this use case. Thanks for pointing it out.
    – Phoenix
    Aug 2, 2012 at 0:40
2

This is a somewhat classic problem. There are many ways to solve it in java. One of the easiest is this one:

boolean isPalindrome(String s) {
   for (int i=0, len=s.length(); i<len/2; i++) {
      if (s.charAt(i) != s.charAt(len-i-1)) return false;
   }
   return true;
}

(Strictly speaking, this is a rewrite rather than a refactoring; however, any rewrite that preserves method signatures can be seen as a refactoring... and it is certainly more efficient)

1

If all you want to do is remove the code duplication between the two else conditions then remove them entirely.

public boolean isPalindrome()
{

    Stack myStack = new Stack();
    for(Node current = head; current!=null; current = current.next)
    {
        if(!myStack.isEmpty())
        {
            if(myStack.peek()==current.data)
            {
                myStack.pop();
                continue;
            }else if(current.next!=null&&myStack.peek()==current.next.data)
            {
                continue;
            }
        }                   
        myStack.push(current.data);             
    }

    return myStack.isEmpty();
}
3
  • Won't work the same as his posted code, it would push even when you pop or continue.
    – While-E
    Aug 1, 2012 at 22:35
  • Fixed. Continue should restart the iteration so it wouldn't push.
    – Justin
    Aug 1, 2012 at 22:38
  • Oh yeah, didn't think about that. Duh.
    – While-E
    Aug 1, 2012 at 22:40
0

A simplification of functionality;

boolean isPalinDrome(String testString) {
    return new StringBuffer(testString).reverse().toString().equals(testString);
}
0

This should provide same functionality without repeat. It is pointed out however that your algorithm doesn't seem to be correct.

public boolean isPalindrome()
{

    Stack myStack = new Stack();
    boolean doPush;
    for(Node current = head; current!=null; current = current.next)
    {
        doPush = true;
        if(!myStack.isEmpty())
        {
            if(myStack.peek()==current.data)
            {
                doPush = false;
                myStack.pop();
            }else if(current.next!=null&&myStack.peek()==current.next.data)
            {
                doPush = false;
                continue;
            }
        }   
        if(doPush){                
            myStack.push(current.data);  
        }           
    }

    return myStack.isEmpty();
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.