I've determined that a Java ArrayList.add
is similar to a JavaScript Array.push
I'm stuck on finding ArrayList
functions similar to the following
Array.pop
Array.shift
Array.unshift
I'm leaning towardArrayList.remove[At]
ArrayList
is unique in its naming standards. Here are the equivalencies:
Array.push -> ArrayList.add(Object o); // Append the list
Array.pop -> ArrayList.remove(int index); // Remove list[index]
Array.shift -> ArrayList.remove(0); // Remove first element
Array.unshift -> ArrayList.add(int index, Object o); // Prepend the list
Note that unshift
does not remove an element, but instead adds one to the list. Also note that corner-case behaviors are likely to be different between Java and JS, since they each have their own standards.
Array.push -> ArrayList.add
, and specifically asked about pop
, shift
, and unshift
. Reading this again, I'm going to add more explanation and add .push
at the same time.
Oct 6, 2016 at 16:20
I was facing with this problem some time ago and I found java.util.LinkedList
is best for my case. It has several methods, with different namings, but they're doing what is needed:
push() -> LinkedList.addLast(); // Or just LinkedList.add();
pop() -> LinkedList.pollLast();
shift() -> LinkedList.pollFirst();
unshift() -> LinkedList.addFirst();
LinkeList
adds methods which would be very inefficient on ArrayList
to the List
interface, this was what confused me. This methods come from the Deque
and Queue
interfaces which it implements, but ArrayList
does not.
May 7, 2015 at 13:19
maybe you want to take a look java.util.Stack
class.
it has push, pop methods. and implemented List interface.
for shift/unshift, you can reference @Jon's answer.
however, something of ArrayList you may want to care about , arrayList is not synchronized. but Stack is. (sub-class of Vector). If you have thread-safe requirement, Stack may be better than ArrayList.
Great Answer by Jon.
I'm lazy though and I hate typing, so I created a simple cut and paste example for all the other people who are like me. Enjoy!
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
List<String> animals = new ArrayList<>();
animals.add("Lion");
animals.add("Tiger");
animals.add("Cat");
animals.add("Dog");
System.out.println(animals); // [Lion, Tiger, Cat, Dog]
// add() -> push(): Add items to the end of an array
animals.add("Elephant");
System.out.println(animals); // [Lion, Tiger, Cat, Dog, Elephant]
// remove() -> pop(): Remove an item from the end of an array
animals.remove(animals.size() - 1);
System.out.println(animals); // [Lion, Tiger, Cat, Dog]
// add(0,"xyz") -> unshift(): Add items to the beginning of an array
animals.add(0, "Penguin");
System.out.println(animals); // [Penguin, Lion, Tiger, Cat, Dog]
// remove(0) -> shift(): Remove an item from the beginning of an array
animals.remove(0);
System.out.println(animals); // [Lion, Tiger, Cat, Dog]
}
}
Underscore-java library contains methods push(values), pop(), shift() and unshift(values).
Code example:
import com.github.underscore.Underscore:
List<String> strings = Arrays.asList("one", "two", " three");
List<String> newStrings = Underscore.push(strings, "four", "five");
// ["one", " two", "three", " four", "five"]
String newPopString = Underscore.pop(strings).fst();
// " three"
String newShiftString = Underscore.shift(strings).fst();
// "one"
List<String> newUnshiftStrings = Underscore.unshift(strings, "four", "five");
// ["four", " five", "one", " two", "three"]