An unbounded priority
queue based on a priority heap. The elements of the priority queue are ordered according to their
natural ordering , or by a
Comparator
provided at queue construction time, depending on which constructor is used. A priority queue does not permit
null
elements. A priority queue relying on natural ordering also does not permit insertion of non-comparable objects (doing so may result in
ClassCastException
).
The head of this queue is the least element with respect to the specified ordering. If multiple elements are tied for least value, the head is one of those elements -- ties are broken arbitrarily. The queue retrieval operations poll
, remove
, peek
, and element
access the element at the head of the queue.
A priority queue is unbounded, but has an internal capacity governing the size of an array used to store the elements on the queue. It is always at least as large as the queue size. As elements are added to a priority queue, its capacity grows automatically. The details of the growth policy are not specified.
This class and its iterator implement all of the optional methods of the Collection
and Iterator
interfaces. The Iterator provided in method iterator()
and the Spliterator provided in method spliterator()
are not guaranteed to traverse the elements of the priority queue in any particular order. If you need ordered traversal, consider using Arrays.sort(pq.toArray())
.
Note that this implementation is not synchronized. Multiple threads should not access a PriorityQueue
instance concurrently if any of the threads modifies the queue. Instead, use the thread-safe PriorityBlockingQueue
class.
Implementation note: this implementation provides O(log(n)) time for the enqueuing and dequeuing methods (offer
, poll
, remove()
and add
); linear time for the remove(Object)
and contains(Object)
methods; and constant time for the retrieval methods (peek
, element
, and size
).
This class is a member of the Java Collections Framework .