CS 261 University of Puget Sound Spring, 2020
 
Computer Science II
Abstract Data Types and their Implementations, Some Basic Algorithms,
Object-oriented Problem Solving, and Efficiency
 

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Queues

Abstract

This reading introduces the concept of the queue abstract data type and provides experience with an array implementation and a stack implementation of this ADT.

Acknowledgement

Most of this reading is an edited version of Henry M. Walker, Introduction to Computing and Computer Science with Pascal, Little, Brown, and Company, 1986, Sections 17.1, 17.5-17.6, with programming examples translated from Pascal to C and then Java. This material is used with permission from the copyright holder.

Reading Context

The stack abstract data type, described in the session on stacks, introduced the concept of an abstract data type (ADT) and discussed the stack as an example that stored and retrieved data in a first-in, last-out (FILO) manner. This lab describes a queue abstract data type that stores and retrieves data in a first-in, first-out (FIFO) manner.


The Queue Abstract Data Type

This queue ADT models the checkout counter of a store. A clerk works with one customer at a time, until the customer's bill has been computed and paid. Then the clerk goes on to the next customer. In this situation, while the customer is being served by the clerk, other customers may get into the checkout line to wait for their turn. Normally, customers do not get into line until they have selected all items they wish to buy, and once a customer gets into line, the customer waits until the clerk finishes with those ahead. When we consider this processing at the cash register, we can identify these characteristics.

  1. Customers wait in a line to be served.
  2. Customers leave the line at one end (the front), when they have been served by the clerk.
  3. Customers enter the line at the other end (the rear).
  4. Occasionally, a line may be empty.

In addition, if a line becomes too long, customers may decide to purchase their items at another time rather than wait in line. In this situation, we might want to specify a maximum size for the queue, and we might want to test if the queue is full.

Unlike stacks where the operational names Push and Pop are standard, the operations for queues are commonly called by several names. For example, the addition of a customer to a queue may be called Enter, Insert, or Enqueue; the leaving of a customer after being served may be called Delete, Remove, or Dequeue. For parallelism in terminology, we use Enqueue and Dequeue here.

More formally, a queue is defined as the abstract data type that has data of a specified type, and operations described as follows:

Normally, queue operations do not allow access to the last or middle items on the queue, only the first. Thus, queues have no equivalent to the Top operation for stacks.

With these operations, queues provide a rather different pattern of data storage and retrieval than we find with stacks. In particular, once an item is placed on a queue, the item is not retrieved until all items ahead of it have already been removed. Here, the first item placed into a queue is the first one processed, and subsequent items must wait for their turn. We say queues provide First-in, First-out (FIFO) storage or Last-in, Last-out (LILO) storage, in contrast to the FILO or LIFO storage of stacks.

Potential Queue Methods in Java

A typical interface for a generic queue with entries of type E follows a format generally parallel to a stack, with adjusted method names.

   /* a constructor for an empty queue
   */
   
  /* return whether the queue is empty
     pre:  queue is an initialized queue
     post: returns true if queue is empty;
           false otherwise
   */
  public boolean isEmpty ()
  
  /* return whether the queue is full
     pre:  queue is an initialized queue
     post: returns true if an additional item
              cannot be added to the queue;
           false otherwise
   */
  public boolean isFull ()

  /* insert given item into back of the queue
     pre:  the specified queue is initialized
     returns:  null if queue is full
               otherwise, reference to item added
   */
  E enqueue (E item)

  /* removes front item from queue referenced by parameter
     pre:  the specified queue is initialized
     returns:  null if queue is empty
               otherwise, reference to the item removed
   */
  E dequeue ()


Implementation of Queues by Arrays

As with stacks, one common implementation of a queue involves the use of an array. Although this implementation is reasonably straightforward, a few details require some care.

Our basic approach is fairly simple. Abstractly, we may think of an array as extending to the right indefinitely, and we store our data items in order in this array. We use variables first and last to mark where our first element was added and where the last or most recent element was added. The figure on the right shows this setup, where we have placed four items on the queue. In the figure, item 0 was inserted first, followed by item 1, item 2, and item 3 in that order. The first item is marked by the variable first and the final item added is marked by last.

From this figure, we can trace what happens in our enqueue and dequeue operations. For the enqueue operation, we must add 1 to last to mark a new end for the queue, and insert the specified item at this new location. Similarly, to dequeue, we must return the first item specified, and add 1 to first to to mark the new head of the queue. With this basic picture, we can tell if a queue is empty by checking if first > last. Further, in this figure, the queue has enough space, so it is never full.

Conceptual Implementation of a Queue

In practice, this basic algorithm is complication by the limitation that an array has a finite size; the array does not extend indefinitely to the right. With this limitation, we have two choices.

Adding an element to a Queue a the end
of the Array

Of these two alternatives, the first approach involves much shifting of data and thus is inefficient. The second approach allows our code to run much more quickly; however, we do need to be sure that we do not store new items on top of old ones, before the old ones are deleted from the queue. This check can be handled in several ways. One of the easiest is to keep a count of the number of items waiting in the queue. When this number reaches the maximum size of the array, the array is full, and further insertions are impossible. This count also allows us to check if the queue is empty.


Queues in Java

As with the implementation of stacks, our implementation of queues in Java utilizes a class Queue to package together the various fields needed:

  public class Queue <E> {
    protected first;
    protected last;
    protected count;
    E queueArray [] ;
    ...
    

Also, in this code, we need to be able to increment first and last by 1 easily, with the first element of the array following the last array element. Since queueArray.length gives the size of the array, then this incrementing can be done using modular arithmetic. For example, assuming a queue object has been declared and initialized, then incrementing first would use the statement:

   this.first = (this.first + 1) % queueArray.length;

Implementation of Queues with Linked Lists

The second approach for implementing queues resolves some of these queue size problems by using the dynamic storage allocation that is available by constructing new objects. As with the discussion of stacks, we want to retain the same operations and calling formats defined earlier when queues were implemented by arrays.

Queue Methods

  /* constructor for an empty queue */ 
  public boolean isEmpty ()
  public boolean isFull (stringQueue queue)
  public E enqueue (E item)
  E dequeue ()

In this structure, we must work with both ends of the queue, inserting items at the tail and deleting them from the head. Here, we view the queue as ordering items from the head to the tail; the head is the first item we will remove, and the tail is the last item. The figure at the right shows how this might work.

A List/Pointer Implementation of a Queue

In the picture, the queue consists of a list of nodes, where each node contains an item of data and each record points to the record that comes after it. This node has the same structure as class StackNode, although we might prefer a clearer name, class QueueNode. In addition, for the overall queue, we will need a class Queue with fiels for the front and back of the queue must be specified. The appropriate declarations are

  public class QueueNode {
     E data;
     StackNode next;
  /* getters and/or setters follow */
  }

   public class Queue {
      QueueNode head;
      QueueNode tail;
      /* method definitions follows */
   }

With these declarations, a constructor should set fields head and tail to null, and the Boolean expression

   queue.head == null;

tests whether the queue is empty. The enqueue operation then proceeds by adding an element at the tail end of the list. Also, the dequeue operation proceeds by returning the data at the head of the list, moving the head pointer to the next elemen. Each of these operations also requires some care for processing the special cases when the queue is empty and when it contains only one item.



created 28 April 1997 by Henry Walker
revised 4 April 2010 by Henry Walker
last revised 17 August 2011 by April O'Neill
revised to updated format 14-16 April 2016 by Henry Walker
updated for Java 1 February 2020 by Henry Walker
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