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How can one convert a list of objects to a queue thereby maintaining the same order?

5 Answers 5

63

Queue has a constructor that takes in an ICollection. You can pass your list into the queue to initialize it with the same elements:

var queue = new Queue<T>(list);    // where 'T' is the lists data type.
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  • Good catch. There actually is a non-generic Queue, but you'd likely want the generic version. I've updated my answer. Aug 11, 2010 at 23:44
  • @zerkms: There is a non-generic Queue class in the System.Collections namespace: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.collections.queue.aspx
    – Rich
    Aug 11, 2010 at 23:45
  • 1
    But now that you've updated your code example to use Queue<T>, your remark that the constructor takes an ICollection is no longer accurate (the Queue<T> constructor takes an IEnumerable<T>).
    – Dan Tao
    Aug 12, 2010 at 1:35
10

What do you mean by "the same order?"

If you do this:

var queue = new Queue<object>(list);

Then the queue will be enumerated over in the same order as the list, which means that a call to Dequeue would return the element that had previously resided at list[0].

If you do this:

var queue = new Queue<object>(list.AsEnumerable().Reverse());

Then the queue will be enumerated over in the opposite order as the list, which means that a call to Dequeue would return the element that had previously resided at list[list.Count - 1].

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var q = new Queue<Object>();
for( int i = 0; i < list.Count; i++ ) q.Enqueue( list[i] );

That is, assuming "same order" means that the first item to be dequeued from the queue should be list[0].

If it means the opposite, just use the reverse loop: for( int i = list.Count-1; i >= 0; i-- )

3

Add this extension to your toolbox to create a FIFO queue of the specific type.

public static class ListExtensions
{
    public static Queue<T> ToQueue<T>(this List<T> items) => new Queue<T>(items);
}
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var mylist = new List<int> {1,2,3};
var q = new Queue<int>(mylist);

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