Doubly Linked List
Description
This is a javascript implementation of a doubly linked
list data structure.
In simple terms, a doubly linked list consists of one or more 'nodes'. Each
node has a data field (which can contain any data--a primitive value or complex
object) and a pointer to the next 'node' and the previous 'node'. This
additional pointer to the previous node is what distinguishes a doubly linked
list from a singly linked list--a singly linked list only contains a pointer,
or reference, to the next node. The major advantage to having pointers to
both the next and previous node is that the list can be traversed in both
directions, as well as making operations that operate on the 'middle' of
the list a bit more efficient since each node has a reference the one
before it and the one after it. The idea of having a links to the
previous and next nodes is where this data structure got its descriptive
name.
This implementation provides basic functionality of adding nodes to the front
or back of the list, as well as the ability to insert a node at a given
position in the list. It also provides the ability to remove nodes at the
front or back of the list, or from any given position.
The find, or search, functionality provides the ability to find the first node
containing specified data. It also provides the ability to find a node given a
specific position, or index, in the list.
Advantages
- List will grow dynamically with each node added; no requirement to
'resize' list when it reaches a certain size, saving considerable overhead
in 'house-keeping' operations.
- Flexibility to add or remove nodes at the beginning or end of the list in
O(1) time. This is a significant improvement over its
singly linked list
counterpart.
Disadvantages
- All 'find' operations take O(n) time to iterate over the list to find the
requested node. This is the case for both the singly and doubly linked
list.
For specific examples and documentation, see the below sections
Motivation:
The main purpose of this project is revisit the basics, and focus on the
development process.
I wholehearedly acknowledge that the basic data structure space is populated
with well-written code and efficient implementations, and one could easily grab
one of those libraries and integrate it in their project. However, the main
difference between those libraries/implementations and this one is that this is
the best implementation I have ever written. My hope is that someone else will
find this useful, but understand, this code is not the goal; this will simply
be a useful bi-product of the journey. The underlying motivation is to
understand and, more importantly, learn from the process to get to the desired
end-state—for me it is all about the joy of the journey.
Environment:
Although this implementation is designed to be used with
Node.js, it could be used in other contexts with minor
modifications. This implementation does not have any external dependencies that
would preclude it from being used in the browser--just include it with a
<script>
tag and it should be good to go. Disclaimer: I have not tested
this implementation in any other context/environment; only tested with node.js
Basic Usage
Install with npm :
npm install dbly-linked-list --save
Install with yarn :
yarn add dbly-linked-list
Basic usage example below. Note: it does not cover all the available
methods, rather just highlights the main functionality to get up and running
with this data structure. For a description of all the methods, see the
API section.
var LinkedList = require('dbly-linked-list');
var list = new LinkedList();
list.isEmpty();
list.insert('data item 1');
list.insert('data item 2');
list.insert('data item 3');
list.insert('data item 4');
list.isEmpty();
list.getSize();
list.insertFirst('data item 0');
list.getHeadNode().getData();
list.remove();
list.removeFirst();
list.getHeadNode().getData();
list.clear();
list.isEmpty();
API
Available methods for a doubly-linked-list instance:
-
getHeadNode()
Returns the first node in the list
-
getTailNode()
Returns the last node in the list
-
isEmpty()
Determines if the list is empty or not. Returns true if is empty, false
otherwise.
-
getSize()
Returns the size of the list, or number of nodes
-
clear()
Clears the list of all nodes/data
-
insert(data)
Inserts a node (with the provided data
) to the end of the list
-
insertFirst(data)
Inserts a node (with the provided data
) to the front of the list
-
insertAt(index, data)
Inserts a node (with the provided data
) at the index
indicated.
-
insertBefore(nodeData, dataToInsert)
Inserts a node (with the dataToInsert
) before the first node containing
nodeData
-
insertAfter(nodeData, dataToInsert)
Inserts a node (with the dataToInsert
) after the first node containing
nodeData
-
remove()
Removes the tail node from the list
-
removeFirst()
Removes the head node from the list
-
removeAt(index)
Removes the node at the index
provided
-
removeNode(nodeData)
Removes the first node that contains the nodeData
provided
-
indexOf(nodeData)
Returns the index of the first node containing the provided nodeData
. If
a node cannot be found containing the provided data, -1 is returned.
-
contains(nodeData)
Determines whether or not the list contains the provided nodeData
-
find(nodeData)
Returns the fist node containing the provided nodeData
. If a node
cannot be found containing the provided data, -1 is returned.
-
findAt(index)
Returns the node at the location provided by index
-
forEach(fn, reverse)
Utility function to iterate over the list and call the fn
provided
on each node, or element, of the list. The optional reverse
parameter
is a boolean used to specify the direction of iteration
(true: tail -> head, false: head -> tail, default: false)
-
toArray()
Returns an array of all the data contained in the list
-
printList()
Prints to the console the data property of each node in the list
-
interruptEnumeration()
Interrupts and breaks out of the loop induced by forEach()
, making partial iterations possible. An iteration cannot be resumed after having been interrupted.
Available methods for an individual node instance:
-
getData()
Returns the data of the the node
-
hasNext()
Returns whether or not the node has a pointer to the next node
-
hasPrev()
Returns whether or not the node has a pointer to the previous node
-
toString()
Returns a string represenation of the node. If the data is an object,
it returns the JSON.stringify version of the object. Otherwise, it
simply returns the data
License
MIT © Jason Jones