Is there any data type equivalent for queue?
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Is there any data type which can handle FIFO queue operations?
I am using arrays to handle queues, but it has executional overhead since the size changes on each iteration. Now, I have to handle even array of queues, but it is getting complicated as each queue has different length at the end of each iteration. When I add an element in a row, the columns length of all the rows increases which makes it difficult to handle it.
Is there any efficient way to handle this situation. Even a link which discusses similar topics would be of great help.
Answers (3)
Guillaume
on 30 Apr 2020
2 votes
The short answer is that no, unfortunately, there's no queue implemented in base matlab (there may be something hidden in one of the toolboxes but it's unlikely you'd be able to use it generically).
I would have a look at the fileexchange, there's probably several implementations of various quality. If there's nothing good enough there, I'd look at implementing it myself. A naive implementation would just grow/shrink an array as the queue fills/empties which indeed would be very innefficient in matlab (and most languages). A better implementation would grow the array in progressively larger chunks.
4 Comments
ROSHITH SEBASTIAN
on 30 Apr 2020
Guillaume
on 9 May 2020
Attached is a simple implementation of a queue in matlab. It is implemented as a class, but it should be fast.
It's not very sophisticated, the storage space of the queue will double in size every time it runs out of space and never decrease. I don't believe it would be a problem unless you have a great number of very long queues. The memory footprint of an empty queue would be |8 bytes * current capacity|.
The queue can store any kind of object, matrices, structures, etc. The type of object should have no impact on performance. Storing 5000 elements in the queue and then dequeuing them all takes around 80 millisecond on my machine.
You can create an array of queues. I'd recommend you use the static method queue.MakeVectorOfQueues unless you know how to create an array of handle objects:
%create an array of 5 queues:
myqueues = queue.MakeVectorOfQueues(5);
%fill queues at random
for i = 1:20
myqueues(randi(5)).enqueue(i);
end
%dequeue all queues:
for q = 1:5
fprintf('queue %d contained: ', q);
while myqueues(q).Depth > 0
fprintf('%d ', myqueues(q).dequeue);
end
fprintf('\n');
end
ROSHITH SEBASTIAN
on 11 May 2020
Edited: ROSHITH SEBASTIAN
on 11 May 2020
Anubhav Kumar
on 19 Mar 2021
@Guillaume I have attached queue.m file in the same directory where my main.m file is present and I am trying to use queue but in main.m where I have written q = queue; on runnung the script error is thrwoing at q = queue.
please help me so that I can solve my issue.
parallel.pool.PollableDataQueue
As revealed by the package name, it can be shared among parallel workers.
Mahendra
on 9 Aug 2023
0 votes
Instead of resizing arrays during execution, you can initialize them with zeros up to a generous length. This way, you avoid frequent size adjustments and can simply track the relevant data within this pre-allocated space.
I frequently do this and found it to not have any speed penalties. We are wasting RAM but rarely are a problem on modern day PCs.
1 Comment
Melih Furkan SEN
on 3 Nov 2023
And how will you pop them ?) or sort?)
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