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ndand | 5 years ago

The comment is correct. The "thing" is the variable that holds the "entry". The entry is removed by updating the "thing".

discuss

order

cmroanirgo|5 years ago

Agreed. The 'indirect pointer' points to the memory address of the previous 'next' (or the head). So, as long as neither are NULL, then dereferencing the pointer is the actual head (or the previous 'next').

Thorrez|5 years ago

> The 'indirect pointer' points to the memory address of the previous 'next' (or the head).

I don't think so. I think the 'indirect pointer' points to the previous 'next' (or the head). It doesn't point to the address of the previous 'next' (or the head). What you say is adding an additional level of indirection that doesn't exist.

Reality:

indirect -> previous next -> first element

What you're saying:

indirect -> address of previous next -> previous next -> first element

In reality indirect contains the address of the previous next, but it doesn't point to the address of the previous next.

Thorrez|5 years ago

> The "thing" is the variable that holds the "entry".

What does "holds" mean? If holds means actually contains the memory, then I don't see the distinction between "thing" and "entry". They both refer to the exact same piece of memory.