Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
71 lines (41 loc) · 2.27 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

71 lines (41 loc) · 2.27 KB

The Odin Project - Linked Lists

JavaScript Course

Assignment

If you wish to use multiple ES6 modules, remember that Node uses CommonJS modules by default and so you must tell Node to use ES6 modules instead.

You will need two classes or factories:

  1. LinkedList class / factory, which will represent the full list.

  2. Node class / factory, containing a value property and a nextNode property, set both as null by default.

Build the following functions in your linked list class / factory:

  1. append(value) adds a new node containing value to the end of the list

  2. prepend(value) adds a new node containing value to the start of the list

  3. size returns the total number of nodes in the list

  4. head returns the first node in the list

  5. tail returns the last node in the list

  6. at(index) returns the node at the given index

  7. pop removes the last element from the list

  8. contains(value) returns true if the passed in value is in the list and otherwise returns false.

  9. find(value) returns the index of the node containing value, or null if not found.

  10. toString represents your LinkedList objects as strings, so you can print them out and preview them in the console. The format should be: ( value ) -> ( value ) -> ( value ) -> null

Extra credit

  1. insertAt(value, index) that inserts a new node with the provided value at the given index.

  2. removeAt(index) that removes the node at the given index.

Extra Credit Tip: When you insert or remove a node, consider how it will affect the existing nodes. Some of the nodes will need their nextNode link updated.

Test it out

Let’s test out the Linked List you made!

  1. Create a main.js file and make sure it imports your LinkedList class or factory. This is where we’ll test the list.

  2. Create an instance of your LinkedList and populate it with nodes:

// example uses class syntax - adjust as necessary
const list = new LinkedList();

list.append("dog");
list.append("cat");
list.append("parrot");
list.append("hamster");
list.append("snake");
list.append("turtle");
  1. Add console.log(list.toString()); to the end of the file and run it.

  2. If everything is working, the output should be:

( dog ) -> ( cat ) -> ( parrot ) -> ( hamster ) -> ( snake ) -> ( turtle ) -> null