A collection designed for holding elements prior to processing. Besides basic
Collection
operations, queues provide additional insertion, extraction, and inspection operations. Each of these methods exists in two forms: one throws an exception if the operation fails, the other returns a special value (either
null
or
false
, depending on the operation). The latter form of the insert operation is designed specifically for use with capacity-restricted
Queue
implementations; in most implementations, insert operations cannot fail.
Queues typically, but do not necessarily, order elements in a FIFO (first-in-first-out) manner. Among the exceptions are priority queues, which order elements according to a supplied comparator, or the elements' natural ordering, and LIFO queues (or stacks) which order the elements LIFO (last-in-first-out). Whatever the ordering used, the head of the queue is that element which would be removed by a call to remove()
or poll()
. In a FIFO queue, all new elements are inserted at the tail of the queue. Other kinds of queues may use different placement rules. Every Queue
implementation must specify its ordering properties.
The offer
method inserts an element if possible, otherwise returning false
. This differs from the Collection.add
method, which can fail to add an element only by throwing an unchecked exception. The offer
method is designed for use when failure is a normal, rather than exceptional occurrence, for example, in fixed-capacity (or "bounded") queues.
The remove()
and poll()
methods remove and return the head of the queue. Exactly which element is removed from the queue is a function of the queue's ordering policy, which differs from implementation to implementation. The remove()
and poll()
methods differ only in their behavior when the queue is empty: the remove()
method throws an exception, while the poll()
method returns null
.
The element()
and peek()
methods return, but do not remove, the head of the queue.
The Queue
interface does not define the blocking queue methods , which are common in concurrent programming. These methods, which wait for elements to appear or for space to become available, are defined in the BlockingQueue
interface, which extends this interface.
Queue
implementations generally do not allow insertion of null
elements, although some implementations, such as LinkedList
, do not prohibit insertion of null
. Even in the implementations that permit it, null
should not be inserted into a Queue
, as null
is also used as a special return value by the poll
method to indicate that the queue contains no elements.
Queue
implementations generally do not define element-based versions of methods equals
and hashCode
but instead inherit the identity based versions from class Object
, because element-based equality is not always well-defined for queues with the same elements but different ordering properties.
This interface is a member of the Java Collections Framework .