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Firstly, I have a linked list implementation of a Queue where Dequeuing occurs at the Head of the linked list. I have one no-argument no-return public method:

public void recursiveDequeue() {
  head = recursiveDequeue(size()-1, head);
}

And a second method:

private Node recursiveDequeue(int index, Node current) {
  if (current==null) {
      // some code I need to write
  }
  return current;
}

I cannot for the life of me figure out how to do this. The only thing I can change is the comment that states clearly where I need to write code.

How do you build a recursion method that dequeues from the head but whose calling method already refers to the head? How is that even recursion? I dont even know what this is supposed to do.

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  • 2
    So what is this method supposed to do? Just "pop" the front node (head) off the list and return it? That doesn't seem like recursion is needed unless that index parameter is to specify "how many" to dequeue Feb 26, 2016 at 5:26
  • 2
    If all you're doing is dequeue-ing the head why recursion? Feb 26, 2016 at 5:26

2 Answers 2

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Maybe something like the following. I don't know what exactly to do with index, seems superfluous here, but if it is the number of elements to dequeue as suggested in comments:

private Node recursiveDequeue(int index, Node current) {
  if (current==null || index==0) {
      return null;
  }
  return recursiveDequeue(index-1,current.next); // for a single-linked list
}
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If the only code you are allowed to write is conditional upon the node argument being null then there is no solution because you can't impact a queue with a non-null head.

If the condition is intended to be current != null then it's possible:

if (current != null) {
    if (index > 0)
        return recursiveDequeue(index - 1, current.getNext());
}
return current;

This will dequeue index items. Given your no argument method calls it with size - 1 it will dequeue all but the last item.

1
  • Happens. I do Python and Java. That's a harder switch sometimes Feb 26, 2016 at 5:32

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