Good question, it defies an answer because I do not have the text book that your teacher is posing questions from. Besides when you have a btree linked lists look kind of stupid.
Outside of academia I do not think linked list are important, a btree is important. As for a real-world application, I do not recall one. I did use a linked list back in the days of the Apple 2/Commodore 64 but That was before hard drives (were affordable) and before I got my hands on btree source code.
For understanding basic concept train would be the best example for linked lists for example adding and deleting nodes is how we add and remove compartments in a train Real time application where linked list is really used is maintaining relational databases. in database tables may be associated with each other so for linking it to each other linked list data structure is the best choice
in the real world
SCIENCE!
Why do you think it is a question? It is a homework assignment.
i think it means that when organazaton
Elevators are an example of an Atwood machine.
hfgh
selling insurance owning a casino
How can the lemon battery project be applied in the real world
The main advantage of a doubly-linked list is that you can traverse and search the list both forwards and backwards. Although you can also add to the beginning and end of the list, and retrieve the same, in constant time O(1), this is also possible with a slightly modified singly-linked list simply by maintaining a pointer to the last node as well as the first. Thus the only real difference is whether you need to traverse bi-directionally or not. If not, a modified singly-linked list would be more efficient. And if you only require fast access to the first node, a standard singly-linked list would be slightly more efficient.
The Real World - 1992 The Disabled List 18-12 was released on: USA: 24 January 2007