Can someone explain to me how this works: def printBackward(list): if list == None: return head = list tail = list.next printBackward(tail) print head,
>>> printBackward(node1) 3 2 1 The printable value of node1 is 1, node2 is 2 and node 3 is 3. node1.next is node2, node2.next is node3 and node3.next is None. This might be painfully obvious, but I don't understand when the print statement is getting called. If you call printBackward with node1, then you skip the if statement, head becomes node1, tail becomes node2 and then you call printBackward again with node2. During this call you call printBackward again with node 3 and then the next time the if statement returns. So when does the print happen, and how does it print 3 different values? It seems like you wouldn't get to it until the last time printBackward returns, and 'head' at that point would be 3, which is the first number printed. But doesn't it stop at this point? Where do 2 and 1 come from? Thanks! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list