Queue Data Structure
Description
This is a javascript implementation of a
queue
data structure.
A queue data structure models the notion of 'First in First Out', or FIFO—
image the line at the grocery store. The first item to be removed from a queue
is the first item placed in the queue. Basically, the order in which items
are placed in the queue matters.
This particular implementation utilizes a
linked list as the
underlying data structure. This offers several benefits.
-
We can leverage the work that has already been done to implement the
linked list.
-
This lends itself to a level of composition and abstraction which greatly
simplifies this implementation. It provides a wrapper around only those
methods of the linked list that we need to construct the properties of a
queue data structure.
-
The 'queue' or 'dequeue' operations can be completed in O(1) time.
-
No additional overhead is required to 'resize' the data structure to add
more elements to the queue. When elements are 'queued' up in the queue, the
underlying linked list will adjust its size dynamically.
For specific examples and documentation, see the below sections
Motivation:
The main purpose of this project is revisit the basics, and focus on the
development process.
I wholehearedly acknowledge that the basic data structure space is populated
with well-written code and efficient implementations, and one could easily grab
one of those libraries and integrate it in their project. However, the main
difference between those libraries/implementations and this one is that this is
the best implementation I have ever written. My hope is that someone else will
find this useful, but understand, this code is not the goal; this will simply
be a useful bi-product of the journey. The underlying motivation is to
understand and, more importantly, learn from the process to get to the desired
end-state—for me it is all about the joy of the journey.
Environment:
Although this implementation is designed to be used with
Node.js, it could be used in other contexts with minor
modifications. This implementation does not have any external dependencies
that would preclude it from being used in the browser--just include it with a
<script>
tag and it should be good to go. Disclaimer: I have not tested
this implementation in any other context/environment; only tested with node.js
Basic Usage
Install with npm :
npm install queue-fifo --save
Install with yarn :
yarn add queue-fifo
Basic usage example below. Note: it does not cover all the available
methods, rather just highlights the main functionality to get up and running
with this data structure. For a description of all the methods, see the
API section.
var Queue = require('queue-fifo');
var queue = new Queue();
queue.isEmpty();
queue.enqueue('data item 1');
queue.enqueue('data item 2');
queue.enqueue('data item 3');
queue.enqueue('data item 4');
queue.isEmpty();
queue.size();
queue.dequeue();
queue.peek()
queue.size();
queue.clear();
queue.isEmpty();
TypeScript definitions are also provided:
import Queue = require('queue-fifo');
let stringQueue = new Queue<string>();
let numberQueue = new Queue<number>();
API
Available methods for a queue instance:
-
isEmpty()
Determines if the queue is empty or not. Returns true if is empty, false
otherwise.
-
size()
Returns the size of the queue, or number of items
-
clear()
Clears the queue of all data
-
enqueue(data)
Adds an new item containing 'data' to the back of the queue
-
dequeue()
Removes the item from the front of the queue
-
peek()
Returns the data of the item at the front of the queue,
but does not remove it
License
MIT © Jason Jones