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performance - Why is appending to a list bad?

I've recently started learning scala, and I've come across the :: (cons) function, which prepends to a list.
In the book "Programming in Scala" it states that there is no append function because appending to a list has performance o(n) whereas prepending has a performance of o(1)

Something just strikes me as wrong about that statement.

Isn't performance dependent on implementation? Isn't it possible to simply implement the list with both forward and backward links and store the first and last element in the container?

The second question I suppose is what I'm supposed to do when I have a list, say 1,2,3 and I want to add 4 to the end of it?

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The key is that x :: somelist does not mutate somelist, but instead creates a new list, which contains x followed by all elements of somelist. This can be done in O(1) time because you only need to set somelist as the successor of x in the newly created, singly linked list.

If doubly linked lists were used instead, x would also have to be set as the predecessor of somelist's head, which would modify somelist. So if we want to be able to do :: in O(1) without modifying the original list, we can only use singly linked lists.

Regarding the second question: You can use ::: to concatenate a single-element list to the end of your list. This is an O(n) operation.

List(1,2,3) ::: List(4)

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