2

I was writing a method for a doubley linked list data structure that is supposed to reverse a list of elements from index a to b, as specified in the parameters, and decided to do it recursively. The objective of the assignment was to practice pointer manipulation using nodes. The logic for my method seemed okay to me, but when I ran the code through a JUnit test it wouldn't end. Thinking this was strange, I added println statements to see which parts of the code it reached; everything checked out okay. So I ran it through Eclipse's debugger, and it reached the ending bracket, after going forward and back through all of the recursive calls, without terminating. It just sat at the end bracket, and I've never seen anything like this before. Why is it doing that and what can I do to fix it?

Here's the code:

public void reverseList(int start, int end)
{
    if (start >= end)
    {
        return;
    }

    ListNode left = getListNode(start);
    ListNode right = getListNode(end);
    ListNode leftNext = left.next;
    ListNode leftPrev = left.previous;
    ListNode rightNext = right.next;
    ListNode rightPrev = right.previous;

    leftPrev.next = right;
    rightPrev.next = left;
    leftNext.previous = right;
    rightNext.previous = left;
    left.next = rightNext;
    left.previous = rightPrev;
    right.next = leftNext;
    right.previous = leftPrev;

    reverseList(start + 1, end - 1);
}

EDIT: Here is code to test it

JUnit:

@Test
public void testReveseList()
{
StudentList list = new StudentList();
list.add("a", "");
list.add("b", "");
list.add("c", "");
list.add("d", "");
list.add("e", "");
list.add("f", "");
list.add("g", "");
list.add("h", "");
list.add("i", "");
list.add("j", "");
list.printlist();
list.reverseList(2, 5);
System.out.println();
StudentList expectedList = new StudentList();
expectedList.add("a", "");
expectedList.add("b", "");
expectedList.add("f", "");
expectedList.add("e", "");
expectedList.add("d", "");
expectedList.add("c", "");
expectedList.add("g", "");
expectedList.add("h", "");
expectedList.add("i", "");
expectedList.add("j", "");
assertEquals(expectedList, list);
list.reverseList(2, 5);

System.out.println();

StudentList expectedList1 = new StudentList();
expectedList1.add("a", "");
expectedList1.add("b", "");
expectedList1.add("c", "");
expectedList1.add("d", "");
expectedList1.add("e", "");
expectedList1.add("f", "");
expectedList1.add("g", "");
expectedList1.add("h", "");
expectedList1.add("i", "");
expectedList1.add("j", "");
assertEquals(expectedList1, list);
list.reverseList(0, 9);
System.out.println();
StudentList expectedList2 = new StudentList();
expectedList2.add("j", "");
expectedList2.add("i", "");
expectedList2.add("h", "");
expectedList2.add("g", "");
expectedList2.add("f", "");
expectedList2.add("e", "");
expectedList2.add("d", "");
expectedList2.add("c", "");
expectedList2.add("b", "");
expectedList2.add("a", "");
assertEquals(expectedList2, list);

}

Test Class:

public class StudentList
{
private ListNode head = null;

public void add(StudentData data)
{
    ListNode newNode = new ListNode(data);
    ListNode lastNode = getTail();

    if (lastNode == null)
    {
        head = newNode;
    }
    else
    {
        lastNode.next = newNode;
    }

    newNode.previous = lastNode;
    newNode.next = null;

}       

    public ListNode getListNode(int indexOfDesiredNode)
{
    if (indexOfDesiredNode >= size())
    {
        // --- Error: There aren't that many nodes
        return null;
    }

    // --- Move through the list, node by node, until we find
    // --- the one we want
    int count = 0;
    ListNode current = head;
    while ((count < indexOfDesiredNode) && (null != current))
    {
        current = current.next;
        count = count + 1;
    }

    // --- So, did we find anything?
    if (null == current)
    {
        // --- Error: We didn't find the node
        return null;
    }

    return current;
}

    public int size()
{
    if (null == head)
    {
        return 0;
    }

    int count = 0;
    ListNode current = head;
    while (current != null)
    {
        count = count + 1;
        current = current.next;
    }
    return count;
}

    public void reverseList(int start, int end)
{
    if (start >= end)
    {
        return;
    }

    ListNode left = getListNode(start);
    ListNode right = getListNode(end);
    ListNode leftNext = left.next;
    ListNode leftPrev = left.previous;
    ListNode rightNext = right.next;
    ListNode rightPrev = right.previous;

    leftPrev.next = right;
    rightPrev.next = left;
    leftNext.previous = right;
    rightNext.previous = left;
    left.next = rightNext;
    left.previous = rightPrev;
    right.next = leftNext;
    right.previous = leftPrev;

    //-- The easy way of doing it... *sigh*
    // StudentData temp = get(start);
    // getListNode(start).data = getListNode(end).data;
    // getListNode(end).data = temp;

    reverseList(start + 1, end - 1);
}
}

And ListNode class:

public class ListNode
{
public StudentData data = null;
public ListNode next = null;
public ListNode previous = null;

public ListNode(StudentData data)
{
    this.data = data;
}

@Override
public String toString()
{
    return data.toString();
}
}

I'm sorry that the formatting isn't the greatest, that happened with copy & paste.

15
  • It should work. The problem could be in the getListNode call. Can you post an SSCCE please?
    – BackSlash
    Oct 20, 2013 at 18:24
  • It's a tail-recursive function; so after the last recursive call actually returns, you just keep implicitly returning from each successive call by reaching the end of the function. Are you sure it never terminates?
    – chepner
    Oct 20, 2013 at 18:29
  • getListNode was written by my instructor so I'm positive it works. It just returns the node at a specified index. Oct 20, 2013 at 18:37
  • @user2900718 So can you post a working example? Assuming that the getListNode method works correctly, your code just works.
    – BackSlash
    Oct 20, 2013 at 18:38
  • In eclipse, it will not show the println statements infinitely printing, but I have to manually terminate the program. Oct 20, 2013 at 18:38

1 Answer 1

0

The problem lies in the case when end == start + 1, hence rightPrev == left. You then set rightPrev.next = left which makes your list circular, so getListNode won't terminate.

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