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I want to use a queue data structure in my Objective-C program. In C++ I'd use the STL queue. What is the equivalent data structure in Objective-C? How do I push/pop items?

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9 Answers

up vote 75 down vote accepted

Ben's version is a stack instead of a queue, so i tweaked it a bit:

NSMutableArray+QueueAdditions.h

@interface NSMutableArray (QueueAdditions)
- (id) dequeue;
- (void) enqueue:(id)obj;
@end

NSMutableArray+QueueAdditions.m

@implementation NSMutableArray (QueueAdditions)
// Queues are first-in-first-out, so we remove objects from the head
- (id) dequeue {
    // if ([self count] == 0) return nil; // to avoid raising exception (Quinn)
    id headObject = [self objectAtIndex:0];
    if (headObject != nil) {
        [[headObject retain] autorelease]; // so it isn't dealloc'ed on remove
        [self removeObjectAtIndex:0];
    }
    return headObject;
}

// Add to the tail of the queue (no one likes it when people cut in line!)
- (void) enqueue:(id)anObject {
    [self addObject:anObject];
    //this method automatically adds to the end of the array
}
@end

Just import the .h file wherever you want to use your new methods, and call them like you would any other NSMutableArray methods.

Good luck and Keep on Coding!

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There is a bug in the dequeue code. I'm going to post a correction below since I can't do it in the comments, but basically objectAtIndex will throw an exception, not return nil if the object doesn't exist. So this code will throw an exception on dequeueing an empty array, rather than returning nil. – DougW Nov 10 '09 at 0:47
1  
I added a commented-out line at the beginning of dequeue for those that wish to return nil rather than raise an exception when trying to dequeue from an empty queue. IMO, following the NSMutableArray behavior of raising an exception is more consistent with Cocoa. After all, you can call -count beforehand to check if there are any objects to dequeue. It's a matter of preference, really. – Quinn Taylor Feb 1 '10 at 17:42
Thanks for the catch guys! – Wolfcow Mar 27 '10 at 21:09
1  
I've added this code to a github repo. Feel free to fork or let me know if I've gotten something wrong: github.com/esromneb/ios-queue-object Thanks!!! – portforwardpodcast Oct 27 '11 at 5:45
1  
@portforwardpodcast the @ notation is a way of directing your comment at a user of that name on stackoverflow. – Richard Smith Mar 25 '12 at 11:47
show 3 more comments

I wouldn't say that using NSMutableArray is necessarily the best solution, particularly if you're adding methods with categories, due to the fragility they can cause if method names collide. For a quick-n-dirty queue, I'd use the methods to add and remove at the end of a mutable array. However, if you plan to reuse the queue, or if you want your code to be more readable and self-evident, a dedicated queue class is probably what you want.

Cocoa doesn't have one built in, but there are other options, and you don't have to write one from scratch either. For a true queue that only adds and removes from the ends, a circular buffer array is an extremely fast implementation. Check out CHDataStructures.framework, a library/framework in Objective-C that I've been working on. It has a variety of implementations of queues, as well as stacks, deques, sorted sets, etc. For your purposes, CHCircularBufferQueue is significantly faster (i.e. provable with benchmarks) and more readable (admittedly subjective) than using an NSMutableArray.

One big advantage of using a native Objective-C class instead of a C++ STL class is that it integrates seamlessly with Cocoa code, and works much better with encode/decode (serialization). It also works perfectly with garbage collection and fast enumeration (both present in 10.5+, but only the latter on iPhone) and you don't have to worry about what is an Objective-C object and what is a C++ object.

Lastly, although NSMutableArray is better than a standard C array when adding and removing from either end, it's also not the fastest solution for a queue. For most applications it is satisfactory, but if you need speed, a circular buffer (or in some cases a linked list optimized to keep cache lines hot) can easily trounce an NSMutableArray.

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2  
Glad that someone actually replied with a true queue solution – Casebash Feb 1 '10 at 2:33
All the links are broken - where do I get that framework? I have read a lot of good stuff about it but can’t find the actual code! – amok Dec 19 '10 at 4:08
The framework sounds promising but the links to SVN are still broken. Any chance to get the code somewhere? EDIT: Got it from mac.softpedia.com/progDownload/… but I can't see whether this is the current version – Kay May 3 '11 at 20:31

As far as I know, Objective-C does not provide a Queue data structure. Your best bet is to create an NSMutableArray, and then use [array lastObject], [array removeLastObject] to fetch the item, and [array insertObject:o atIndex:0]...

If you're doing this a lot, you might want to create an Objective-C category to extend the functionality of the NSMutableArray class. Categories allow you to dynamically add functions to existing classes (even the ones you don't have the source for) - you could make a queue one like this:

(NOTE: This code is actually for a stack, not a queue. See comments below)

@interface NSMutableArray (QueueAdditions)

- (id)pop;
- (void)push:(id)obj;

@end

@implementation NSMutableArray (QueueAdditions)

- (id)pop
{
    // nil if [self count] == 0
    id lastObject = [[[self lastObject] retain] autorelease];
    if (lastObject)
        [self removeLastObject];
    return lastObject;
}

- (void)push:(id)obj
{
     [self addObject: obj];
}

@end
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3  
Categories are so useful. – dreamlax Jun 10 '09 at 5:12
3  
Are you aware you've implemented a stack here, not a queue? – Jim Puls Jun 10 '09 at 5:26
Ahh - sorry! - see Wolfcow's modifications below. – Ben Gotow Jun 12 '09 at 21:38
I'd agree if you replace "best bet" with "simplest option". :-) Data structure purists and performance obsessors would prefer a true queue, but an NSMutableArray can easily stand in for a queue. – Quinn Taylor Jun 16 '09 at 18:43
2  
+1 to ben because I wanted a stack solution even though a queue was asked for :) – Lee Whitney Aug 29 '11 at 21:52

There's no real queue collections class, but NSMutableArray can be used for effectively the same thing. You can define a category to add pop/push methods as a convenience if you want.

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True, an NSMutableArray makes a pretty decent queue, although removing from the front is not something an array structure excels at. Even so, for small queues, performance isn't a major concern anyway. A friend of mine blogged about this topic a while back... sg80bab.blogspot.com/2008/05/… – Quinn Taylor Jun 16 '09 at 18:41

re:Wolfcow -- Here is a corrected implementation of Wolfcow's dequeue method

- (id)dequeue {
    if ([self count] == 0) {
    	return nil;
    }
    id queueObject = [[[self objectAtIndex:0] retain] autorelease];
    [self removeObjectAtIndex:0];
    return queueObject;
}
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Yes, use NSMutableArray. NSMutableArray is actually implemented as 2-3 tree; you typically need not concern yourself with the performance characteristics of adding or removing objects from NSMutableArray at arbitrary indices.

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NSArray (and NSMutableArray by extension) is a class cluster, meaning it has several private implementations that may be used interchangeably behind the scenes. The one you get usually depends on the number of elements. Also, Apple is free to change the details of any given implementation at any time. However, you're correct that it's usually much more flexible than a standard array. – Quinn Taylor Jun 21 '09 at 14:27

Use NSMutableArray.

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Is there some particular reason you cannot just use the STL queue? Objective C++ is a superset of C++ (just use .mm as the extension instead of .m to use Objective C++ instead of Objective C). Then you can use the STL or any other C++ code.

One issue of using the STL queue/vector/list etc with Objective C objects is that they do not typically support retain/release/autorelease memory management. This is easily worked around with a C++ Smart Pointer container class which retains its Objective C object when constructed and releases it when destroyed. Depending on what you are putting in the STL queue this is often not necessary.

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this is my implementation, hope it helps.

Is kind of minimalistic, so you must keep the track of the head by saving the new head at pop and discarding the old head

@interface Queue : NSObject {
    id _data;
    Queue *tail;
}

-(id) initWithData:(id) data;
-(id) getData;

-(Queue*) pop;
-(void) push:(id) data;

@end

#import "Queue.h"

@implementation Queue

-(id) initWithData:(id) data {
    if (self=[super init]) {
        _data = data;
        [_data retain];
    }
    return self;
}
-(id) getData {
    return _data;
}

-(Queue*) pop {
    return tail;
}
-(void) push:(id) data{
    if (tail) {
        [tail push:data];
    } else {
        tail = [[Queue alloc]initWithData:data];
    }
}

-(void) dealloc {
    if (_data) {
        [_data release];
    }
    [super release];
}

@end
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