com.google.common.collect
Class MinMaxPriorityQueue<E>

java.lang.Object
  extended by java.util.AbstractCollection<E>
      extended by java.util.AbstractQueue<E>
          extended by com.google.common.collect.MinMaxPriorityQueue<E>
All Implemented Interfaces:
Iterable<E>, Collection<E>, Queue<E>

@Beta
public final class MinMaxPriorityQueue<E>
extends AbstractQueue<E>

A double-ended priority queue, which provides constant-time access to both its least element and its greatest element, as determined by the queue's specified comparator. If no comparator is given at construction time, the natural order of elements is used.

As a Queue it functions exactly as a PriorityQueue: its head element -- the implicit target of the methods peek(), poll() and AbstractQueue.remove() -- is defined as the least element in the queue according to the queue's comparator. But unlike a regular priority queue, the methods peekLast(), pollLast() and removeLast() are also provided, to act on the greatest element in the queue instead.

A min-max priority queue can be configured with a maximum size. If so, each time the size of the queue exceeds that value, the queue automatically removes its greatest element according to its comparator (which might be the element that was just added). This is different from conventional bounded queues, which either block or reject new elements when full.

This implementation is based on the min-max heap developed by Atkinson, et al. Unlike many other double-ended priority queues, it stores elements in a single array, as compact as the traditional heap data structure used in PriorityQueue.

This class is not thread-safe, and does not accept null elements.

Performance notes:

Since:
8.0
Author:
Sverre Sundsdal, Torbjorn Gannholm

Nested Class Summary
static class MinMaxPriorityQueue.Builder<B>
          The builder class used in creation of min-max priority queues.
 
Method Summary
 boolean add(E element)
          Adds the given element to this queue.
 boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> newElements)
           
 void clear()
           
 Comparator<? super E> comparator()
          Returns the comparator used to order the elements in this queue.
static
<E extends Comparable<E>>
MinMaxPriorityQueue<E>
create()
          Creates a new min-max priority queue with default settings: natural order, no maximum size, no initial contents, and an initial expected size of 11.
static
<E extends Comparable<E>>
MinMaxPriorityQueue<E>
create(Iterable<? extends E> initialContents)
          Creates a new min-max priority queue using natural order, no maximum size, and initially containing the given elements.
static MinMaxPriorityQueue.Builder<Comparable> expectedSize(int expectedSize)
          Creates and returns a new builder, configured to build MinMaxPriorityQueue instances sized appropriately to hold expectedSize elements.
 Iterator<E> iterator()
          Returns an iterator over the elements contained in this collection, in no particular order.
static MinMaxPriorityQueue.Builder<Comparable> maximumSize(int maximumSize)
          Creates and returns a new builder, configured to build MinMaxPriorityQueue instances that are limited to maximumSize elements.
 boolean offer(E element)
          Adds the given element to this queue.
static
<B> MinMaxPriorityQueue.Builder<B>
orderedBy(Comparator<B> comparator)
          Creates and returns a new builder, configured to build MinMaxPriorityQueue instances that use comparator to determine the least and greatest elements.
 E peek()
           
 E peekFirst()
          Retrieves, but does not remove, the least element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.
 E peekLast()
          Retrieves, but does not remove, the greatest element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.
 E poll()
           
 E pollFirst()
          Removes and returns the least element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.
 E pollLast()
          Removes and returns the greatest element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.
 E removeFirst()
          Removes and returns the least element of this queue.
 E removeLast()
          Removes and returns the greatest element of this queue.
 int size()
           
 Object[] toArray()
           
 
Methods inherited from class java.util.AbstractQueue
element, remove
 
Methods inherited from class java.util.AbstractCollection
contains, containsAll, isEmpty, remove, removeAll, retainAll, toArray, toString
 
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, wait, wait, wait
 
Methods inherited from interface java.util.Collection
contains, containsAll, equals, hashCode, isEmpty, remove, removeAll, retainAll, toArray
 

Method Detail

create

public static <E extends Comparable<E>> MinMaxPriorityQueue<E> create()
Creates a new min-max priority queue with default settings: natural order, no maximum size, no initial contents, and an initial expected size of 11.


create

public static <E extends Comparable<E>> MinMaxPriorityQueue<E> create(Iterable<? extends E> initialContents)
Creates a new min-max priority queue using natural order, no maximum size, and initially containing the given elements.


orderedBy

public static <B> MinMaxPriorityQueue.Builder<B> orderedBy(Comparator<B> comparator)
Creates and returns a new builder, configured to build MinMaxPriorityQueue instances that use comparator to determine the least and greatest elements.


expectedSize

public static MinMaxPriorityQueue.Builder<Comparable> expectedSize(int expectedSize)
Creates and returns a new builder, configured to build MinMaxPriorityQueue instances sized appropriately to hold expectedSize elements.


maximumSize

public static MinMaxPriorityQueue.Builder<Comparable> maximumSize(int maximumSize)
Creates and returns a new builder, configured to build MinMaxPriorityQueue instances that are limited to maximumSize elements. Each time a queue grows beyond this bound, it immediately removes its greatest element (according to its comparator), which might be the element that was just added.


size

public int size()
Specified by:
size in interface Collection<E>
Specified by:
size in class AbstractCollection<E>

add

public boolean add(E element)
Adds the given element to this queue. If this queue has a maximum size, after adding element the queue will automatically evict its greatest element (according to its comparator), which may be element itself.

Specified by:
add in interface Collection<E>
Specified by:
add in interface Queue<E>
Overrides:
add in class AbstractQueue<E>
Returns:
true always

addAll

public boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> newElements)
Specified by:
addAll in interface Collection<E>
Overrides:
addAll in class AbstractQueue<E>

offer

public boolean offer(E element)
Adds the given element to this queue. If this queue has a maximum size, after adding element the queue will automatically evict its greatest element (according to its comparator), which may be element itself.


poll

public E poll()

peek

public E peek()

pollFirst

public E pollFirst()
Removes and returns the least element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.


removeFirst

public E removeFirst()
Removes and returns the least element of this queue.

Throws:
NoSuchElementException - if the queue is empty

peekFirst

public E peekFirst()
Retrieves, but does not remove, the least element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.


pollLast

public E pollLast()
Removes and returns the greatest element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.


removeLast

public E removeLast()
Removes and returns the greatest element of this queue.

Throws:
NoSuchElementException - if the queue is empty

peekLast

public E peekLast()
Retrieves, but does not remove, the greatest element of this queue, or returns null if the queue is empty.


iterator

public Iterator<E> iterator()
Returns an iterator over the elements contained in this collection, in no particular order.

The iterator is fail-fast: If the MinMaxPriorityQueue is modified at any time after the iterator is created, in any way except through the iterator's own remove method, the iterator will generally throw a ConcurrentModificationException. Thus, in the face of concurrent modification, the iterator fails quickly and cleanly, rather than risking arbitrary, non-deterministic behavior at an undetermined time in the future.

Note that the fail-fast behavior of an iterator cannot be guaranteed as it is, generally speaking, impossible to make any hard guarantees in the presence of unsynchronized concurrent modification. Fail-fast iterators throw ConcurrentModificationException on a best-effort basis. Therefore, it would be wrong to write a program that depended on this exception for its correctness: the fail-fast behavior of iterators should be used only to detect bugs.

Specified by:
iterator in interface Iterable<E>
Specified by:
iterator in interface Collection<E>
Specified by:
iterator in class AbstractCollection<E>
Returns:
an iterator over the elements contained in this collection

clear

public void clear()
Specified by:
clear in interface Collection<E>
Overrides:
clear in class AbstractQueue<E>

toArray

public Object[] toArray()
Specified by:
toArray in interface Collection<E>
Overrides:
toArray in class AbstractCollection<E>

comparator

public Comparator<? super E> comparator()
Returns the comparator used to order the elements in this queue. Obeys the general contract of PriorityQueue.comparator, but returns Ordering.natural() instead of null to indicate natural ordering.



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