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Introduction to In-Place Manipulation of a Linked List

Explore the in-place manipulation pattern for linked lists, focusing on reversing, reordering, and swapping nodes without using additional memory. Understand how to modify linked list structures efficiently with constant space complexity, solving common interview problems involving linked list restructuring.

About the pattern

The in-place manipulation of a linked list pattern allows us to modify a linked list without using any additional memory. In-place refers to an algorithm that processes or modifies a data structure using only the existing memory space, without requiring additional memory proportional to the input size. This pattern is best suited for problems where we need to modify the structure of the linked list, i.e., the order in which nodes are linked together. For example, some problems require a reversal of a set of nodes in a linked list which can extend to reversing the whole linked list. Instead of making a new linked list with reversed links, we can do it in place without using additional memory. ...