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queue-typed
Advanced tools
In the usual gig, we make do with Array.push and Array.shift to play Queue in JavaScript, but here's the kicker – native JavaScript Array isn't exactly Queue VIP. That shift move? It's a bit of a slow dance with a time complexity of linear time complexity O(n). When you're working with big data, you don't want to be caught slow-shifting. So, we roll up our sleeves and craft a Queue that's got a speedy constant time complexity O(1) Queue.enqueue(), a snappy O(1) Queue.dequeue(), and a lightning-fast O(1) Queue.getAt(). Yep, it's Queue-tastic!
| Data Structure | Enqueue | Dequeue | Access | Enqueue & Dequeue 100000 | Access 100000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Queue Typed | O(1) | O(1) | O(1) | 22.60ms | 10.60ms |
| JavaScript Native Array | O(1) | O(n) | O(1) | 931.10ms | 8.60ms |
| Other Queue | O(1) | O(1) | O(n) | 28.90ms | 17175.90ms |
This is a standalone Queue data structure from the data-structure-typed collection. If you wish to access more data structures or advanced features, you can transition to directly installing the complete data-structure-typed package
npm i queue-typed --save
yarn add queue-typed
import {Queue} from 'queue-typed';
// /* or if you prefer */ import {Queue} from 'queue-typed';
const queue = new Queue<number>();
for (let i = 0; i < magnitude; i++) {
queue.enqueue(i);
}
for (let i = 0; i < magnitude; i++) {
queue.dequeue();
}
for (let i = 0; i < magnitude; i++) {
console.log(queue.getAt(i)); // 0, 1, 2, 3, ...
}
const {Queue} = require('queue-typed');
// /* or if you prefer */ const {Queue} = require('queue-typed');
const queue = new Queue();
for (let i = 0; i < magnitude; i++) {
queue.enqueue(i);
}
for (let i = 0; i < magnitude; i++) {
queue.dequeue();
}
for (let i = 0; i < magnitude; i++) {
console.log(queue.getAt(i)); // 0, 1, 2, 3, ...
}
// Create a simple Queue with initial values
const queue = new Queue([1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);
// Verify the queue maintains insertion order
console.log([...queue]); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
// Check length
console.log(queue.length); // 5;
const queue = new Queue<number>([10, 20, 30, 40]);
// Peek at the front element without removing it
console.log(queue.first); // 10;
// Remove and get the first element (FIFO)
const first = queue.shift();
console.log(first); // 10;
// Verify remaining elements and length decreased
console.log([...queue]); // [20, 30, 40];
console.log(queue.length); // 3;
const queue = new Queue<string>(['A', 'B', 'C', 'D']);
const elements: string[] = [];
for (const item of queue) {
elements.push(item);
}
// Verify all elements are iterated in order
console.log(elements); // ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'];
// Process all elements
while (queue.length > 0) {
queue.shift();
}
console.log(queue.length); // 0;
interface Message {
id: string;
type: 'email' | 'sms' | 'push';
recipient: string;
content: string;
timestamp: Date;
}
// Create a message queue for real-time event processing
const messageQueue = new Queue<Message>([
{
id: 'msg-001',
type: 'email',
recipient: 'user@example.com',
content: 'Welcome!',
timestamp: new Date()
},
{
id: 'msg-002',
type: 'sms',
recipient: '+1234567890',
content: 'OTP: 123456',
timestamp: new Date()
},
{
id: 'msg-003',
type: 'push',
recipient: 'device-token-xyz',
content: 'New notification',
timestamp: new Date()
},
{
id: 'msg-004',
type: 'email',
recipient: 'admin@example.com',
content: 'Daily report',
timestamp: new Date()
}
]);
// Process messages in FIFO order (first message first)
const processedMessages: string[] = [];
while (messageQueue.length > 0) {
const message = messageQueue.shift();
if (message) {
processedMessages.push(`${message.type}:${message.recipient}`);
}
}
// Verify messages were processed in order
console.log(processedMessages); // [
// 'email:user@example.com',
// 'sms:+1234567890',
// 'push:device-token-xyz',
// 'email:admin@example.com'
// ];
// Queue should be empty after processing all messages
console.log(messageQueue.length); // 0;
| Data Structure | Unit Test | Performance Test | API Docs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Queue | Queue |
| Data Structure Typed | C++ STL | java.util | Python collections |
|---|---|---|---|
| Queue<E> | queue<T> | Queue<E> | - |
| test name | time taken (ms) | executions per sec | sample deviation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1,000,000 push | 39.90 | 25.07 | 0.01 |
| 1,000,000 push & shift | 81.79 | 12.23 | 0.00 |
| Algorithm | Function Description | Iteration Type |
|---|
| Principle | Description |
|---|---|
| Practicality | Follows ES6 and ESNext standards, offering unified and considerate optional parameters, and simplifies method names. |
| Extensibility | Adheres to OOP (Object-Oriented Programming) principles, allowing inheritance for all data structures. |
| Modularization | Includes data structure modularization and independent NPM packages. |
| Efficiency | All methods provide time and space complexity, comparable to native JS performance. |
| Maintainability | Follows open-source community development standards, complete documentation, continuous integration, and adheres to TDD (Test-Driven Development) patterns. |
| Testability | Automated and customized unit testing, performance testing, and integration testing. |
| Portability | Plans for porting to Java, Python, and C++, currently achieved to 80%. |
| Reusability | Fully decoupled, minimized side effects, and adheres to OOP. |
| Security | Carefully designed security for member variables and methods. Read-write separation. Data structure software does not need to consider other security aspects. |
| Scalability | Data structure software does not involve load issues. |
FAQs
Queue data structure
The npm package queue-typed receives a total of 406 weekly downloads. As such, queue-typed popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that queue-typed demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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