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03:40
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A: Linked List sorting issue

maracaYou are close. First the function to compare the items is not complete, so isSorted() could yield wrong results (if the count is the same but the words are in wrong order). This is also used to sort, so it's best to extract a method for the comparison: // returns a value < 0 if a < b, a value > ...

I tried implementing the changes to the sort method (I omitted the part about character sorting since I figured it's probably best to start with getting the count sort right), and was again greeted with an infinite loop. I'm not sure where, but I think somewhere in my code, my references are being messed up. Hopefully it's not 100+ iterations in when I debug it.
@csh1579 I added a little bit more code to show how I meant it, like this you shouldn't get an endless loop.
Now this is where I run into a problem that's stumped me throughout this project - you say to swap x and p, but how could I swap x and p if I don't know the element that leads to x? Wouldn't the normal process be to: link x.next to p.next, link p.next to x, link (element that points to x) to p?
@csh1579 yes you are right. I edited my code now, first had a mistake in the for.
I see how you're approaching it, but wouldn't we have to check to make sure x.next.next is not null (or am I missing the point here :P)?
03:40
@csh1579 exactly what I thought too first, but usually the check would be x != null, because it will be checked after x = x.next and therefore it is correct like that for bubble sort. oldX == null is the only special case.
@csh1579 it is true that x.next.next can be null, but that doesn't concern you when swapping x with x.next, because the last node's next points to null right?
deleted my previous comment - I've gotten the oldX case, so I think I'm getting a grasp on it. But wouldn't omitting x.next.next mess up all the swaps?
This can be pretty complicated, the easiest step is updating oldX;
oldX.next = x.next; // before: oldX.next == x
then we could assign x.next = x and x = oldX to swap nodes
finally we need to update the pointers of x and x.next... or we should have done it before, probably easier to just first introduce another variable y:
y = x.next
swap nodes: t = x; x = y; y = t;
update oldX: oldX.next = x;
update pointers of x and y: x.next = y; ... I think I still made a mistake, you have to update the pointers in the right order...
04:25
are you there?
it is so damn complicated, would draw it on paper
start: oldX => x => x.next => Z (whatever)
update oldX, so we don't have to care about it any more: oldX.next = x.next
reduced the problem to swap x=>x.next=>Z
(need to handle special case if oldX == null)
then you assign y = x.next
wait a minute, just looking at it the wrong way...
it is a remove and an insert if you will

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