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Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms

Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms

By : Ray Chawdhuri
2.3 (3)
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Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms

Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms

2.3 (3)
By: Ray Chawdhuri

Overview of this book

Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms covers classical, functional, and reactive data structures, giving you the ability to understand computational complexity, solve problems, and write efficient code. This book is based on the Zero Bug Bounce milestone of Java 9. We start off with the basics of algorithms and data structures, helping you understand the fundamentals and measure complexity. From here, we introduce you to concepts such as arrays, linked lists, as well as abstract data types such as stacks and queues. Next, we’ll take you through the basics of functional programming while making sure you get used to thinking recursively. We provide plenty of examples along the way to help you understand each concept. You will also get a clear picture of reactive programming, binary searches, sorting, search trees, undirected graphs, and a whole lot more!
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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12
Index

Queue

What is the opposite of a stack? This may be a weird question. However, a stack follows LIFO, last in first out. The opposite of that is first-in-first-out (FIFO). So, in some sense, a FIFO ADT can be considered as the opposite of a stack. This is not very different from a queue of people waiting for a bus or at a doctor's clinic. The first person to show up gets the first chance to get onto the bus or to get to see the doctor. The second person gets the second chance. No wonder, such an abstract data type is called a queue. Appending to the end of a queue is called enqueuing and removing from it is called dequeuing. The contract is, of course, that the first value that is enqueued would be the first to be dequeued. The following figure illustrates this operation:

Queue

The queue ADT has the following operations:

  • Enqueue: This adds an element at the back of the queue
  • Dequeue: This removes an element from the front of the queue
  • Peek: This checks the element that would be dequeued next...
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Java 9 Data Structures and Algorithms
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