I am trying to to understand why Java's ArrayDeque is better than Java's LinkedList as they both implement Deque interface.
I hardly see someone using ArrayDeque in their code. If someone sheds more light into how 开发者_如何学JAVAArrayDeque is implemented, it would be helpful.
If I understand it, I will be more confident using it. I could not clearly understand the JDK implementation as to the way it manages head and tail references.
Linked structures are possibly the worst structure to iterate with a cache miss on each element. On top of it they consume way more memory.
If you need add/remove of the both ends, ArrayDeque is significantly better than a linked list. Random access each element is also O(1) for a cyclic queue.
The only better operation of a linked list is removing the current element during iteration.
I believe that the main performance bottleneck in LinkedList
is the fact that whenever you push to any end of the deque, behind the scene the implementation allocates a new linked list node, which essentially involves JVM/OS, and that's expensive. Also, whenever you pop from any end, the internal nodes of LinkedList
become eligible for garbage collection and that's more work behind the scene.
Also, since the linked list nodes are allocated here and there, usage of CPU cache won't provide much benefit.
If it might be of interest, I have a proof that adding (appending) an element to ArrayList
or ArrayDeque
runs in amortized constant time; refer to this.
All the people criticizing a LinkedList
, think about every other guy that has been using List
in Java probably uses ArrayList
and an LinkedList
most of the times because they have been before Java 6 and because those are the ones being taught as a start in most books.
But, that doesn't mean, I would blindly take LinkedList
's or ArrayDeque
's side. If you want to know, take a look at the below benchmark done by Brian (archived).
The test setup considers:
- Each test object is a 500 character String. Each String is a different object in memory.
- The size of the test array will be varied during the tests.
- For each array size/Queue-implementation combination, 100 tests are run and average time-per-test is calculated.
- Each tests consists of filling each queue with all objects, then removing them all.
- Measure time in terms of milliseconds.
Test Result:
- Below 10,000 elements, both LinkedList and ArrayDeque tests averaged at a sub 1 ms level.
- As the sets of data get larger, the differences between the ArrayDeque and LinkedList average test time gets larger.
- At the test size of 9,900,000 elements, the LinkedList approach took ~165% longer than the ArrayDeque approach.
Graph:
Takeaway:
- If your requirement is storing 100 or 200 elements, it wouldn't make much of a difference using either of the Queues.
- However, if you are developing on mobile, you may want to use an
ArrayList
orArrayDeque
with a good guess of maximum capacity that the list may be required to be because of strict memory constraint. - A lot of code exists, written using a
LinkedList
so tread carefully when deciding to use aArrayDeque
especially because it DOESN'T implement theList
interface(I think that's reason big enough). It may be that your codebase talks to the List interface extensively, most probably and you decide to jump in with anArrayDeque
. Using it for internal implementations might be a good idea...
ArrayDeque
is new with Java 6, which is why a lot of code (especially projects that try to be compatible with earlier Java versions) don't use it.
It's "better" in some cases because you're not allocating a node for each item to insert; instead all elements are stored in a giant array, which is resized if it gets full.
ArrayDeque and LinkedList are implementing Deque interface but implementation is different.
Key differences:
The ArrayDeque class is the resizable array implementation of the Deque interface and LinkedList class is the list implementation
NULL elements can be added to LinkedList but not in ArrayDeque
ArrayDeque is more efficient than the LinkedList for add and remove operation at both ends and LinkedList implementation is efficient for removing the current element during the iteration
The LinkedList implementation consumes more memory than the ArrayDeque
So if you don't have to support NULL elements && looking for less memory && efficiency of add/remove elements at both ends, ArrayDeque is the best
Refer to documentation for more details.
I don't think ArrayDeque
is better than LinkedList
. They are different.
ArrayDeque
is faster than LinkedList
on average. But for adding an element, ArrayDeque
takes amortized constant time, and LinkedList
takes constant time.
For time-sensitive applications that require all operations to take constant time, only LinkedList
should be used.
ArrayDeque
's implementation uses arrays and requires resizing, and occasionally, when the array is full and needs to add an element, it will take linear time to resize, resulting the add()
method taking linear time. That could be a disaster if the application is very time-sensitive.
A more detailed explanation of Java's implementation of the two data structures is available in the "Algorithms, Part I" course on Coursera offered by Princeton University, taught by Wayne and Sedgewick. The course is free to the public.
The details are explained in the video "Resizing Arrays" in the "Stacks and Queues" section of "Week 2".
although ArrayDeque<E>
and LinkedList<E>
have both implemented Deque<E>
Interface, but the ArrayDeque uses basically Object array E[]
for keeping the elements inside its Object, so it generally uses index for locating the head and tail elements.
In a word, it just works like Deque (with all Deque's method), however uses array's data structure. As regards which one is better, depends on how and where you use them.
That's not always the case.
For example, in the case below linkedlist
has better performance than ArrayDeque
according to leetcode 103.
/**
* Definition for a binary tree node.
* public class TreeNode {
* int val;
* TreeNode left;
* TreeNode right;
* TreeNode(int x) { val = x; }
* }
*/
class Solution {
public List<List<Integer>> zigzagLevelOrder(TreeNode root) {
List<List<Integer>> rs=new ArrayList<>();
if(root==null)
return rs;
//
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