65

In my program I need to delete an element from a priority queue that is not at the top. Can that be done? If not, please suggest a way to do so except creating your own heap.

13
  • 9
    Why a have you specifically chosen a priority queue if it doesn't support the operations you want? Why not instead choose a data structure which does support those operations, like a set? Oct 19, 2013 at 15:11
  • 9
    Which behaviors? Fast access to the max (or min) element? set has that. Quick removal of arbitrary elements? set has that too. Oct 19, 2013 at 15:14
  • 13
    Then use a multiset. Oct 19, 2013 at 15:19
  • 5
    *mySet.begin(), *mySet.rbegin(). Since a set is ordered, the first and last elements are the smallest and the largest, correspondingly. Oct 19, 2013 at 18:04
  • 2
    possible duplicate of STL Priority Queue - deleting an item May 30, 2015 at 17:04

6 Answers 6

65

The standard priority_queue<T> can be customized through inheritance. It has protected members c and comp that can be referenced in a descendant class.

template<typename T>
class custom_priority_queue : public std::priority_queue<T, std::vector<T>>
{
  public:

      bool remove(const T& value) {
          auto it = std::find(this->c.begin(), this->c.end(), value);
       
          if (it == this->c.end()) {
              return false;
          }
          if (it == this->c.begin()) {
              // deque the top element
              this->pop();
          }    
          else {
              // remove element and re-heap
              this->c.erase(it);
              std::make_heap(this->c.begin(), this->c.end(), this->comp);
         }
         return true;
     }
};

void main()
{
   custom_priority_queue<int> queue;

   queue.push(10);
   queue.push(2);
   queue.push(4);
   queue.push(6);
   queue.push(3);

   queue.remove(6);

   while (!queue.empty())
   {
      std::cout << queue.top();
      queue.pop();

      if (!queue.empty())
      {
        std::cout << ", ";
      }
   }

 }

Output:

10, 4, 3, 2

7
  • 3
    The call to make_heap isn't necessary since the heap remains ordered. Aug 19, 2016 at 14:22
  • @alexm If I want to pass a custom comparator to the object, how do I write the class declaration? Oct 17, 2016 at 9:47
  • 2
    @SandeepTuniki: If you want to pass a custom comparator, the class declaration could look like this: template<typename T, class Container=std::vector<T>, class Compare=std::less<typename Container::value_type>> class custom_priority_queue : public std::priority_queue<T, Container, Compare> Jun 5, 2017 at 22:11
  • 7
    @klaustriendl, could you explain why make_heap is unnecessary, especially if the removed item happen to be at the top / multiple items were removed? My guess is that make_heap is unnecessary only if heap is fully sorted which is not the case.
    – Aelian
    Dec 14, 2018 at 18:26
  • 3
    @Aelian You are absolutely right, and thank you for detecting my mistake. It seems I misunderstood the properties of a heap, so I mistakened "sorted" for "structured". So if you remove an element you need to restructure the heap. May 5, 2019 at 18:54
50

The best solution is to use std::set. Sets provide methods which allow it to be used both as a min/max heap (or a priority queue).

std::set<int> pq;

//accessing the smallest element(use as min heap)
*pq.begin();

//accessing the largest element (use as max heap)
*pq.rbegin();

Furthermore sets also allow random deletion.

//to delete the integer '6'
auto it = pq.find(6);
pq.erase(it);
4
  • 13
    This solution won't work if the elements can repeat.
    – Vipul Jain
    Jul 28, 2019 at 13:14
  • 7
    I think the idea is cool, you can use multiset for repeating elements. But remember to pay attention when you are erasing by value instead of iterator.
    – Po-Jen Lai
    Oct 29, 2019 at 3:47
  • 4
    For repeated elements you can simply use a map. Just keep a count of keys and when the count of a key becomes 0, remove the key. Solved this problem using the same idea spoj.com/problems/ARRAYSUB Jul 24, 2021 at 15:49
  • 1
    @VipulJain You could always use a multi-set. Feb 24, 2023 at 6:09
14

A neat little trick to handle deletes for a priority_queue STL - use another priority_queue, say, del_pq. Keep inserting all the delete values to this. When you are popping values from the original priority queue, check with top of del_pq and see if we wanted to delete it. If it matches, delete the value from the original priority_queue.

This method implements a way to lazily delete the values in our original priority queue. Can take up twice the memory, but average delete and inserts remain O(logN).

1
  • I am not sure if the element at the top is always the answer, but using unordered_set (or similar) for the deletion should also work in sublinear time.
    – Ferazhu
    Apr 23, 2023 at 20:50
5

Pradip and MASh sacrifice the time to realize the remove operation. But if time complexity is important to you, I suggest you to use hash min_heap. A Hash table stores the value-pointer and the pointers point to a min_heap. Which means you can spend O(1) time to find the value in min_heap and O(log(n)) to remove(sift-up or sift down) the element.

1
  • 3
    Never sacrifice the time.
    – Jon Deaton
    Dec 13, 2017 at 18:40
0

My C++ is quite rusty - here I provide a C# solution that I hope can be easily translated to C++.

The idea is to subclass the standard C# class PriorityQueue and add a Remove method. Here is the code - for readability I am using an instance of PriorityQueue<int, int> - this could be easily generalized to PriorityQueue<TElement, TPriority>

    public class MyHeap 
    {
        private PriorityQueue<int, int> _theQueue = new PriorityQueue<int, int>();
        private HashSet<int> _deleted = new HashSet<int>();

        public void Add(int v)
        {
            _deleted.Remove(v);
            _theQueue.Enqueue(v, v);
        }

        public void Remove(int v)
        {
            _deleted.Add(v);
        }

        public int GetMinimum()
        {
            var qMin = _theQueue.Peek();
            while(_deleted.Contains(qMin))
            {
                _theQueue.Dequeue();
                _deleted.Remove(qMin);
                qMin = _theQueue.Peek();
            }
            return qMin;
        }
    }
-4

Please note the following approach does the things but not the optimized way to solution. For optimized approach, check other answers.

Let you want to delete the 5th element in the priority_queue<type> Q . Then you can do this like:

vector<type> tempQ;
int i = 0;
int n = 5;
type t;

// backup n-1 items
while(i < n-1)
{
    tempQ.push_back(Q.top());
    Q.pop();        
    i++;
}

// remove the nth item
Q.pop();

// restore the backed up items
i = 0;
while(i < n-1)
{
    t = tempQ[i++];
    Q.push(t);
}
2
  • 1
    So what is the complexity of this method ? I do not see the need of using a temporary PQ. why not use a vector vector<type> tempQ
    – kevin
    Nov 25, 2016 at 2:06
  • Good point, here we just need a container. I using a vector instead will improve time complexity. I updated the answer. +1 for your point @kevin
    – Shafi
    Nov 25, 2016 at 14:27

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