Question
What deeper point about Singly Linked Lists should a senior Java developer mention?
- At senior level, the right answer is that Singly Linked Lists exists mostly for historical syntax reasons.
- A senior answer mentions that theoretical insertion benefits disappear if the code must first walk many nodes to reach the update point.
- At senior level, the JVM removes the tradeoffs around Singly Linked Lists, so design choices barely matter.
- At senior level, any approach to Singly Linked Lists is equally correct if it compiles and passes a small test.
Hint
Look beyond syntax and explain the runtime, API, or design consequence.
Answer and rationale
Correct answer: B. A senior answer mentions that theoretical insertion benefits disappear if the code must first walk many nodes to reach the update point.
A senior answer mentions that theoretical insertion benefits disappear if the code must first walk many nodes to reach the update point. This is the kind of tradeoff-aware answer senior interviews usually expect.
Track: Java