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What is the fastest way to convert a Queue into a List while keeping the Queue order?

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6 Answers 6

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The fastest is to use a LinkedList in the first place which can be used as a List or a Queue.

Queue q = new LinkedList();
List l = (List) q;

Otherwise you need to take a copy

List l = new ArrayList(q);

Note: When dealing with PriorityQueue, Use a loop, poll each element and add to list. PriorityQueue to List not maintaining the heap order.

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13

Pass Queue To ArrayList Constructor

The easiest way to just create a ArrayList and pass your Queue as an argument in the constructor of ArrayList that takes a Collection. A Queue is a Collection, so that works.

This is the easiest way and I believe fastest way too.

List<?> list = new ArrayList<>( myQueue );
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  • 2
    Should be the accepted answer, is it is the only one to directly address the Question. The Question referred to the Queue interface. There are many implementations of Queue, both bundled with Java and found in other libraries such as Google Guava. The other answers refer only to LinkedList which is but one of many implementations. Commented Jan 14, 2015 at 4:35
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If you're converting from PriorityQueue to a List, remember that it is in fact a heap, so the ordering is determined using the poll() method, in which case, doing it by the constructor way as discussed in some of the other answers here, won't preserve the natural ordering of the queue.

Taking that into consideration, you can go along these lines:

List<E> result = new ArrayList<>(yourPriorityQueue.size());
while (!yourPriorityQueue.isEmpty()) {
    result.add(yourPriorityQueue.poll());
}
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Queue queue = new LinkedList();
...
List list = new ArrayList(queue);
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Answering to old question for users who are already on java 8
Java 8 provides the option of using streams and you can get a list from queue as:

For example:

Queue<Student> queue = new LinkedList<>();
        Student s1 = new Student("A",2);
        Student s2 = new Student("B",1);
        Student s3 = new Student("C",3);
        queue.add(s1);
        queue.add(s2);
        queue.add(s3);

    List<Student> studentList = queue.stream().collect(Collectors.toCollection(ArrayList::new));
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  • If the queue is PriorityQ, then this streams methods preserves the order?
    – kakoli
    Commented Sep 3, 2020 at 14:19
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Google:

Queue fruitsQueue = new LinkedList();
fruitsQueue.add("Apples");
fruitsQueue.add("Bananas");
fruitsQueue.add("Oranges");
fruitsQueue.add("Grapes");

List fruitsList = new ArrayList(fruitsQueue);

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