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Count Racers
TIP102 Unit 5 Session 1 Advanced (Click for link to problem statements)
- 💡 Difficulty: Easy
- ⏰ Time to complete: 10-15 mins
- 🛠️ Topics: Linked Lists
Understand what the interviewer is asking for by using test cases and questions about the problem.
- Established a set (2-3) of test cases to verify their own solution later.
- Established a set (1-2) of edge cases to verify their solution handles complexities.
- Have fully understood the problem and have no clarifying questions.
- Have you verified any Time/Space Constraints for this problem?
-
What is the input?
- The input is the head of a linked list where each node represents a player in the race.
-
What is the output?
- The output is an integer representing the total number of nodes (players) in the linked list.
-
Can the list be empty?
- Yes, the linked list can be empty, in which case the output should be 0.
HAPPY CASE
Input: mario -> peach -> luigi -> daisy
Output: 4
Explanation: There are 4 nodes, representing 4 players.
Input: mario
Output: 1
Explanation: There is only 1 node, so the output is 1.
EDGE CASE
Input: None
Output: 0
Explanation: An empty linked list results in an output of 0.
Match what this problem looks like to known categories of problems, e.g. Linked List or Dynamic Programming, and strategies or patterns in those categories.
This problem is a Linked List Traversal problem, where we need to iterate through each node of the linked list and count the total number of nodes.
For linked list problems, consider:
- Traversing the list one node at a time.
- Checking for the end of the list (i.e., when
current
isNone
).
Plan the solution with appropriate visualizations and pseudocode.
General Idea: We need to traverse the linked list from the head node to the last node, counting each node we encounter.
1) Initialize a variable `count` to 0 to store the number of players.
2) Set `current` to the `head` of the linked list.
3) While `current` is not None:
a) Increment the `count` by 1.
b) Move `current` to the next node.
4) Once we reach the end of the list (`current` is None), return the `count`.
- Forgetting to handle the edge case where the linked list is empty.
- Missing a condition to stop traversal (when
current
becomesNone
).
Implement the code to solve the algorithm.
class Node:
def __init__(self, player, next=None):
self.player_name = player
self.next = next
def count_racers(head):
count = 0
current = head
while current:
count += 1
current = current.next
return count
Review the code by running specific example(s) and recording values (watchlist) of your code's variables along the way.
-
Input: mario -> peach -> luigi -> daisy
- Watchlist:
count
is incremented at each step: 1, 2, 3, 4. - Expected Output: 4
- Watchlist:
-
Input: mario
- Watchlist:
count
starts at 0 and increments once. - Expected Output: 1
- Watchlist:
-
Input: None
- Watchlist:
count
remains 0 as there are no nodes. - Expected Output: 0
- Watchlist:
Evaluate the performance of your algorithm and state any strong/weak or future potential work.
Assume N
represents the number of nodes in the linked list.
-
Time Complexity:
O(N)
because we traverse each node exactly once. -
Space Complexity:
O(1)
because we only use a constant amount of space regardless of the size of the linked list.