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This approach involves using two separate linked lists to store nodes that are less than x and nodes that are greater than or equal to x. You traverse the original list and attach each node to the appropriate list. Finally, you connect the two lists together to form the partitioned list.
Time Complexity: O(n), where n is the number of nodes in the list.
Space Complexity: O(1), as we only use a constant amount of extra space.
1class ListNode:
2    def __init__(self, val=0, next=None):
3        self.val = val
4        self.next = next
5
6class Solution:
7    def partition(self, head: ListNode, x: int) -> ListNode:
8        less_head = ListNode()
9        greater_head = ListNode()
10        less, greater = less_head, greater_head
11
12        while head:
13            if head.val < x:
14                less.next = head
15                less = less.next
16            else:
17                greater.next = head
18                greater = greater.next
19            head = head.next
20
21        greater.next = None
22        less.next = greater_head.next
23        return less_head.nextThis Python solution uses two pointers: one for nodes less than x and another for nodes greater or equal to x. By connecting the two groups at the end, the list is partitioned as required.
This in-place rearrangement technique modifies the original list without the need of additional dummy nodes. This is accomplished by managing pointers to redefine segment connections efficiently.
Time Complexity: O(n)
Space Complexity: O(1)
1#include
    
This C implementation uses four pointers to represent the start and end of the 'before' and 'after' lists. As we traverse the original list, we reattach nodes to these lists, eventually connecting them at the end.