1721. Swapping Nodes in a Linked List
Problem Description
In this problem, you are provided with the head of a singly linked list and an integer k
. The goal is to return the modified linked list after swapping the values of two specific nodes: the k
th node from the beginning and the k
th node from the end. The linked list is indexed starting from 1, which means that the first node is considered the 1st node from both the beginning and the end in the case of a single-node list. Note that it's not the nodes themselves that are being swapped, but rather their values.
Intuition
To solve this problem, we think about how we can access the k
th node from the beginning and the end of a singly linked list. A singly linked list does not support random access in constant time; meaning we can't directly access an element based on its position without traversing the list.
Given we only need to swap the values and not the nodes themselves, a two-pointer approach is perfect. The first step is to locate the k
th node from the beginning which can be done by traversing k-1
nodes from the head. We use a pointer p
to keep track of this node.
Finding the k
th node from the end is trickier because we don't know the length of the linked list beforehand. However, by using two pointers – fast
and slow
– and initially set both at the head, we can move fast
k-1
steps ahead so that it points to the k
th node. Then, we move both fast
and slow
at the same pace. When fast
reaches the last node of the list, slow
will be pointing at the k
th node from the end. We use another pointer q
to mark this node.
Once we have located both nodes to be swapped, p
and q
, we simply exchange their values and return the (modified) head of the linked list as the result.
Learn more about Linked List and Two Pointers patterns.
Solution Approach
The implementation of the solution follows a two-pointer approach that is commonly used when dealing with linked list problems. The algorithm is simple yet powerful and can be broken down into the following steps:
- Initialize two pointers
fast
andslow
to reference the head of the linked list. - Move the
fast
pointerk-1
steps ahead. After this loop,fast
will be pointing to thek
th node from the beginning of the list. We use pointerp
to mark this node. - Once the
fast
pointer is in position, we start moving bothfast
andslow
pointers one step at a time untilfast
is pointing to the last node of the linked list. Now, theslow
pointer will be at thek
th node from the end of the list. We use another pointerq
to mark this node. - Swap the values of nodes
p
andq
by exchanging theirval
property. - Finally, return the modified linked list's head.
This is a classical algorithm that does not require additional data structures for its execution and fully utilizes the linked list's sequential access nature. It's efficient because it only requires a single pass to find both the k
th node from the beginning and the k
th node from the end, resulting in O(n) time complexity, where n
is the number of nodes in the linked list.
The only tricky part that needs careful consideration is handling edge cases, such as k
being 1 (swapping the first and last elements), k
being equal to half the list's length (in the case of an even number of nodes), or the list having k
or fewer nodes. However, since the problem only asks to swap values, the provided solution handles all these cases without any additional checks.
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Start EvaluatorExample Walkthrough
Let's walk through an example to illustrate the solution approach. Consider a linked list and an integer k
:
Linked List: 1 -> 2 -> 3 -> 4 -> 5 k: 2
Our task is to swap the 2
nd node from the beginning with the 2
nd node from the end.
-
Initialize two pointers
fast
andslow
to reference the head of the linked list. -
Move the
fast
pointerk-1
steps ahead. So, after this step:fast: 2 (Second node) slow: 1 (Head of the list)
-
Start moving both
fast
andslow
one step at a time untilfast
points to the last node:Step 1: fast: 3 slow: 2 Step 2: fast: 4 slow: 3 Step 3: fast: 5 (Last node) slow: 4 (This becomes our `k`th node from the end)
-
At this point, we have:
p (kth from the beginning): Node with value 2 q (kth from the end): Node with value 4
-
Swap the values of nodes
p
andq
:Node `p` value before swap: 2 Node `q` value before swap: 4 Swap their values. Node `p` value after swap: 4 Node `q` value after swap: 2
-
The modified linked list now looks like this:
Modified Linked List: 1 -> 4 -> 3 -> 2 -> 5
-
Return the head of the modified linked list, which points to the node with value
1
.
This example illustrates the power of the two-pointer approach where pointer manipulation allows us to swap the k
th nodes' values from the start and end of a singly linked list in O(n) time complexity without any additional space required.
Solution Implementation
1class ListNode:
2 def __init__(self, value=0, next_node=None):
3 self.value = value
4 self.next_node = next_node
5
6class Solution:
7 def swapNodes(self, head: Optional[ListNode], k: int) -> Optional[ListNode]:
8 # Initialize two pointers that will start at the head of the list.
9 fast_pointer = slow_pointer = head
10
11 # Move the fast pointer k-1 steps ahead, pointing to the kth node from the beginning.
12 for _ in range(k - 1):
13 fast_pointer = fast_pointer.next_node
14
15 # Store the kth node from the beginning in a temporary variable 'first_k_node'.
16 first_k_node = fast_pointer
17
18 # Move both pointers until the fast pointer reaches the end.
19 # At that point, slow pointer will point to the kth node from the end.
20 while fast_pointer.next_node:
21 fast_pointer = fast_pointer.next_node
22 slow_pointer = slow_pointer.next_node
23
24 # Store the kth node from the end in a temporary variable 'second_k_node'.
25 second_k_node = slow_pointer
26
27 # Swap the values of the kth node from the beginning and the kth node from the end.
28 first_k_node.value, second_k_node.value = second_k_node.value, first_k_node.value
29
30 # Return the modified linked list head.
31 return head
32
1/**
2 * Definition for singly-linked list.
3 * public class ListNode {
4 * int val;
5 * ListNode next;
6 * ListNode() {}
7 * ListNode(int val) { this.val = val; }
8 * ListNode(int val, ListNode next) { this.val = val; this.next = next; }
9 * }
10 */
11
12class Solution {
13 public ListNode swapNodes(ListNode head, int k) {
14 // Fast pointer that will be used to locate the kth node from the beginning
15 ListNode kthFromStart = head;
16
17 // Move the kthFromStart pointer to the kth node
18 while (--k > 0) {
19 kthFromStart = kthFromStart.next;
20 }
21
22 // This pointer will eventually point to the kth node from the end
23 ListNode kthFromEnd = head;
24
25 // Fast pointer that will be used to reach the end of the list
26 ListNode current = kthFromStart;
27
28 // Move the current pointer to the end, maintaining the gap between
29 // kthFromEnd and current, so that when current reaches the end,
30 // kthFromEnd is at the kth node from the end
31 while (current.next != null) {
32 current = current.next;
33 kthFromEnd = kthFromEnd.next;
34 }
35
36 // Swap the values of the kth node from the start and end
37 int tempValue = kthFromStart.val;
38 kthFromStart.val = kthFromEnd.val;
39 kthFromEnd.val = tempValue;
40
41 // Return the modified list
42 return head;
43 }
44}
45
1/**
2 * Definition for singly-linked list.
3 * struct ListNode {
4 * int val;
5 * ListNode *next;
6 * ListNode() : val(0), next(nullptr) {}
7 * ListNode(int x) : val(x), next(nullptr) {}
8 * ListNode(int x, ListNode *next) : val(x), next(next) {}
9 * };
10 */
11class Solution {
12public:
13 ListNode* swapNodes(ListNode* head, int k) {
14 // Initialize a pointer to move k nodes into the list
15 ListNode* fast = head;
16 while (--k) { // Move the fast pointer k-1 times
17 fast = fast->next;
18 }
19 // At this point, fast points to the kth node from the beginning
20
21 // Initialize two pointers to find the kth node from the end
22 ListNode* slow = head; // This will point to the kth node from the end
23 ListNode* firstNode = fast; // Keep a reference to the kth node from the beginning
24
25 // Move both pointers until the fast pointer reaches the end of the list
26 while (fast->next) {
27 fast = fast->next;
28 slow = slow->next;
29 }
30 // Now, slow points to the kth node from the end
31
32 ListNode* secondNode = slow; // Keep reference to the kth node from the end
33
34 // Swap the values of the kth nodes from the beginning and end
35 std::swap(firstNode->val, secondNode->val);
36
37 // Return the head of the modified list
38 return head;
39 }
40};
41
1// Function to swap the kth node from the beginning with the kth node from the end in a singly-linked list
2function swapNodes(head: ListNode | null, k: number): ListNode | null {
3 // Initialize two pointers, both starting at the head of the list
4 let fast: ListNode | null = head;
5 let slow: ListNode | null = head;
6
7 // Move the 'fast' pointer to the kth node
8 while (--k) {
9 fast = fast ? fast.next : null;
10 }
11
12 // 'starting' points to the kth node from the beginning
13 // This node will later be swapped
14 let starting = fast;
15
16 // Move both 'fast' and 'slow' until 'fast' reaches the end of the list
17 // 'slow' will then point to the kth node from the end
18 while (fast && fast.next) {
19 fast = fast.next;
20 slow = slow ? slow.next : null;
21 }
22
23 // 'ending' points to the kth node from the end
24 let ending = slow;
25
26 // If both nodes to swap have been found, swap their values
27 if (starting && ending) {
28 let temp = starting.val;
29 starting.val = ending.val;
30 ending.val = temp;
31 }
32
33 // Return the head of the modified list
34 return head;
35}
36
Time and Space Complexity
The time complexity of the provided code snippet is O(n)
, where n
is the length of the linked list. This is because the code iterates over the list twice: once to find the k
-th node from the beginning, and once more to find the k
-th node from the end while simultaneously finding the end of the list.
The space complexity is O(1)
since only a constant amount of additional space is used, regardless of the input size. No extra data structures are created that depend on the size of the list; only a fixed number of pointers (fast
, slow
, and p
) are used.
Learn more about how to find time and space complexity quickly using problem constraints.
Which type of traversal does breadth first search do?
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