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Why exactly do we need a "Circular Linked List" (singly or doubly) data structure?

What problem does it solve that is evident with simple Linked Lists (singly or doubly)?

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  • I read the above comment as "Why exactly do we need a circular linked list? Because the goal of SO is to be the correct first place...." Then I read the earlier "-1" comment :D
    – Swapnil
    Aug 27, 2017 at 5:04

10 Answers 10

53

A simple example is keeping track of whose turn it is in a multi-player board game. Put all the players in a circular linked list. After a player takes his turn, advance to the next player in the list. This will cause the program to cycle indefinitely among the players.

To traverse a circular linked list, store a pointer to the first element you see. When you see that element again, you have traversed the entire list.

void traverse(CircularList *c) {
  if (is_empty(c)) {
    return;
  }
  CircularList start = c;
  do {
    operateOnNode(c);
    c = c->next;
  } while(c != start);
}
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  • A general traversal also needs if (!is_empty(c)) { ... } around the whole do .. while loop. Nov 10, 2011 at 16:30
  • 2
    Is it too hard to use if(!c) c=head; in a single linked list instead of implementing this? Nov 2, 2015 at 14:52
  • @omerfarukdogan (late response!) That is an extra check that needs to be applied at every node. (Remember the start might be halfway through the linked list.) It is more efficient to get rid of the check by making the list circular, and remove the need to test before every navigation. Apr 6, 2020 at 16:30
27

Two reasons to use them:

1) Some problem domains are inherently circular.

For example, the squares on a Monopoly board can be represented in a circularly linked list, to map to their inherent structure.

2) Some solutions can be mapped to a circularly linked list for efficiency.

For example, a jitter buffer is a type of buffer that takes numbered packets from a network and places them in order, so that (for example) a video or audio player can play them in order. Packets that are too slow (laggy) are discarded.

This can be represented in a circular buffer, without needing to constantly allocate and deallocate memory, as slots can be re-used once they have been played.

It could be implemented with a linked-list, but there would be constant additions and deletions to the list, rather than replacement to the constants (which are cheaper).

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  • 1
    A particle system I wrote for a game uses a circular list for the particles. If we run out of unused particles (limited for performance and memory reasons), then we just overwrite the oldest ones (which will just be at the "start" of the loop, as we write to the back). Aug 28, 2010 at 7:44
  • Sorry, I can't provide web-links for my claims. Call it original research. :-) The Monopoly board is an invented example to illustrate the idea. I have never seen the code of a Monopoly implementation. The jitter buffer example is based on a few examples of code that I have developed and/or worked on. Aug 28, 2010 at 16:03
  • 1
    Can't these problems be solved with just a normal linked list together with a loop?
    – day
    Feb 25, 2014 at 17:30
  • 1
    @day sure. With a circular list though, you trade off algorithm complexity for (a rather small) structure complexity. Having a loop would mean having at least an extra check while with a circular list your structure is inherently solving this for you.
    – Pithikos
    Apr 8, 2017 at 19:18
14

Something i found from google.

A singly linked circular list is a linked list where the last node in thelist points to the first node in the list. A circular list does not contain NULL pointers.

A good example of an application where circular linked list should be used is a timesharing problem solved by the operating system.

In a timesharing environment, the operating system must maintain a list of present users and must alternately allow each user to use a small slice of CPU time, one user at a time. The operating system will pick a user, let him/her use a small amount of CPU time and then move on to the next user, etc.

For this application, there should be no NULL pointers unless there is absolutely no one requesting CPU time.

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13

Applications

1) We can use circular linked list any application where the entries appear in a rotating manner.
2) Circular linked list is the basic idea of round robin scheduling algorithm.

6

A circular linked list can be effectively used to create a queue (FIFO) or a deque (efficient insert and remove from front and back). See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linked_list#Circularly-linked_vs._linearly-linked

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Circular linked lists are widely used in applications where tasks are to be repeated or in time sharing applications. Circular queue can keep a track of tasks which have been performed and which has to be performed,once the specific task is done it jumps to next one and when whole set of task is conpleted it again jumps to first task to complete the remaining job. In practical use : when you open multiple applications on your system the memory of those applications are saved in a circular fashion, you can observe this if u continuously press win+tab/alt+tab for switching applications. Also in multiplayer board games ,each player are assigned to node in the linked list and the rotation is performed

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Circular linked lists (singly or doubly) are useful for applications that need to visit each node equally and the lists could grow. If the size of the list if fixed, it is much more efficient (speed and memory) to use circular queue.

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A circular list is simpler than a normal doubly-linked list. Append is just prepend and shift forward once, Pop back is just shift back once and pop front. By tying the two ends together, you get a double-ended list for the cost of just implementing the operations of a one-ended list.

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  • 1
    In your words a circular list is a single list with both ends connected. OK, but how is that any good?
    – Pithikos
    Apr 8, 2017 at 19:14
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We can use circularly linked list in resource pooling. If many users want to use a shared resource, we can allocate that resource using circularly linked list.

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A good example of an application where circular linked list should be used is a timesharing problem solved by the operating system.

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