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Lesson 6 - Queue and stack in C# .NET

In the previous lesson, Dictionaries and sets in C# .NET, we introduced dictionaries and sets. Today's tutorial is dedicated to two special collections, queues and stacks. We'll explain how these collections work and create examples in C# .NET for each one of them. The queue and the stack are used in rather advanced algorithms, but every programmer should know them and know how to use them when it's convenient.

Queue

Queue (generally as FIFO, meaning First In First Out) refers to a collection that has two basic methods. These methods are an analogy for adding and removing methods from other collections. The method for adding an element adds it to the end of the queue, just like when you're waiting in line at the post office. The removal method always removes the first element of the queue, i.e. the one who's about to be served, not the one that was last added. Keep in mind that the element is returned by the method before being deleted from the queue. Meaning that the collection allows us to


 

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In this tutorial, we'll describe the queue and stack collections, create some examples, and learn how to use the Queue and Stack classes in C# .NET.

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Article has been written for you by David Capka Hartinger
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The author is a programmer, who likes web technologies and being the lead/chief article writer at ICT.social. He shares his knowledge with the community and is always looking to improve. He believes that anyone can do what they set their mind to.
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