data structures with java code example
Example 1: data structures in c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#define MAX 10
int count = 0;
struct stack {
int items[MAX];
int top;
};
typedef struct stack st;
void createEmptyStack(st *s) {
s->top = -1;
}
int isfull(st *s) {
if (s->top == MAX - 1)
return 1;
else
return 0;
}
int isempty(st *s) {
if (s->top == -1)
return 1;
else
return 0;
}
void push(st *s, int newitem) {
if (isfull(s)) {
printf("STACK FULL");
} else {
s->top++;
s->items[s->top] = newitem;
}
count++;
}
void pop(st *s) {
if (isempty(s)) {
printf("\n STACK EMPTY \n");
} else {
printf("Item popped= %d", s->items[s->top]);
s->top--;
}
count--;
printf("\n");
}
void printStack(st *s) {
printf("Stack: ");
for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {
printf("%d ", s->items[i]);
}
printf("\n");
}
int main() {
int ch;
st *s = (st *)malloc(sizeof(st));
createEmptyStack(s);
push(s, 1);
push(s, 2);
push(s, 3);
push(s, 4);
printStack(s);
pop(s);
printf("\nAfter popping out\n");
printStack(s);
}
Example 2: Data Structures java
Data Structures
Example 3: what are the data structures in java
Data Structures
in Java: Array, Collections Framework, Map.
1-ARRAY:
- It is fixed size.
- Ordered
-Allows Duplicates
-Can store Primitives and objects
-Can be multi-dimensional
-Build in data structure
2-COLLECTIONS: (LIST, SET, QUQUE)
List: Can store duplicate values,
Keeps the insertion order.
It allows multiple null values,
Also we can read a certain value by index.
- ArrayList not syncronized, array based class
- LinkedList not synchronized, doubly linked
- Vector is synchronized, thread safe
Set: Can only store unique values,
And does not maintain order
- HashSet can have null, order is not guaranteed
- LinkedHashSet can have null and keeps the order
- TreeSet sorts the order and don't accept null
Quque : Accepts duplicates,
Doesn't have index num,
First in first our order.
3-MAP:
is a (key-value format)
and keys are always unique,
and value can be duplicated.
- HashTable don't have null key, sychronized(thread-safe)
- LinkedHashMap can have null key, keeps order
- HasHMap can have null key, order is not guaranteed
- TreeMap doesn't have null key and keys are sorted