
- Java - Home
- Java - Overview
- Java - History
- Java - Features
- Java Vs. C++
- JVM - Java Virtual Machine
- Java - JDK vs JRE vs JVM
- Java - Environment Setup
- Java - Hello World Program
- Java - Comments
- Java - Basic Syntax
- Java - Variables
- Java - Data Types
- Java - Type Casting
- Java - Unicode System
- Java - User Input
- Java - Date & Time
Java Operators
- Java - Operators
- Java - Arithmetic Operators
- Java - Assignment Operators
- Java - Relational Operators
- Java - Logical Operators
- Java - Bitwise Operators
- Java Operator Precedence & Associativity
Java Control Statements
- Java - Decision Making
- Java - If Else Statement
- Java - Switch Statement
- Java - Loop Control
- Java - For Loop
- Java - For-Each Loop
- Java - While Loop
- Java - Do While Loop
- Java - Break Statement
- Java - Continue Statement
Object Oriented Programming
- Java - OOPs Concepts
- Java - Object & Classes
- Java - Class Attributes
- Java - Class Methods
- Java - Methods
- Java - Variables Scope
- Java - Constructors
- Java - Access Modifiers
- Java - Inheritance
- Java - Aggregation
- Java - Polymorphism
- Java - Overriding
- Java - Method Overloading
- Java - Dynamic Binding
- Java - Static Binding
- Java - Instance Initializer Block
- Java - Abstraction
- Java - Encapsulation
- Java - Interfaces
- Java - Packages
- Java - Inner Classes
- Java - Static Class
- Java - Anonymous Class
- Java - Singleton Class
- Java - Wrapper Classes
- Java - Enums
- Java - Enum Constructor
- Java - Enum Strings
Java Built-in Classes
Java File Handling
- Java - Files
- Java - Create a File
- Java - Write to File
- Java - Read Files
- Java - Delete Files
- Java - Directories
- Java - I/O Streams
Java Error & Exceptions
- Java - Exceptions
- Java - try-catch Block
- Java - try-with-resources
- Java - Multi-catch Block
- Java - Nested try Block
- Java - Finally Block
- Java - throw Exception
- Java - Exception Propagation
- Java - Built-in Exceptions
- Java - Custom Exception
Java Multithreading
- Java - Multithreading
- Java - Thread Life Cycle
- Java - Creating a Thread
- Java - Starting a Thread
- Java - Joining Threads
- Java - Naming Thread
- Java - Thread Scheduler
- Java - Thread Pools
- Java - Main Thread
- Java - Thread Priority
- Java - Daemon Threads
- Java - Thread Group
- Java - Shutdown Hook
Java Synchronization
- Java - Synchronization
- Java - Block Synchronization
- Java - Static Synchronization
- Java - Inter-thread Communication
- Java - Thread Deadlock
- Java - Interrupting a Thread
- Java - Thread Control
- Java - Reentrant Monitor
Java Networking
- Java - Networking
- Java - Socket Programming
- Java - URL Processing
- Java - URL Class
- Java - URLConnection Class
- Java - HttpURLConnection Class
- Java - Socket Class
- Java - Generics
Java Collections
Java Interfaces
- Java - List Interface
- Java - Queue Interface
- Java - Map Interface
- Java - SortedMap Interface
- Java - Set Interface
- Java - SortedSet Interface
Java Data Structures
Java Collections Algorithms
Advanced Java
- Java - Command-Line Arguments
- Java - Lambda Expressions
- Java - Sending Email
- Java - Applet Basics
- Java - Javadoc Comments
- Java - Autoboxing and Unboxing
- Java - File Mismatch Method
- Java - REPL (JShell)
- Java - Multi-Release Jar Files
- Java - Private Interface Methods
- Java - Inner Class Diamond Operator
- Java - Multiresolution Image API
- Java - Collection Factory Methods
- Java - Module System
- Java - Nashorn JavaScript
- Java - Optional Class
- Java - Method References
- Java - Functional Interfaces
- Java - Default Methods
- Java - Base64 Encode Decode
- Java - Switch Expressions
- Java - Teeing Collectors
- Java - Microbenchmark
- Java - Text Blocks
- Java - Dynamic CDS archive
- Java - Z Garbage Collector (ZGC)
- Java - Null Pointer Exception
- Java - Packaging Tools
- Java - Sealed Classes
- Java - Record Classes
- Java - Hidden Classes
- Java - Pattern Matching
- Java - Compact Number Formatting
- Java - Garbage Collection
- Java - JIT Compiler
Java Miscellaneous
- Java - Recursion
- Java - Regular Expressions
- Java - Serialization
- Java - Strings
- Java - Process API Improvements
- Java - Stream API Improvements
- Java - Enhanced @Deprecated Annotation
- Java - CompletableFuture API Improvements
- Java - Streams
- Java - Datetime Api
- Java 8 - New Features
- Java 9 - New Features
- Java 10 - New Features
- Java 11 - New Features
- Java 12 - New Features
- Java 13 - New Features
- Java 14 - New Features
- Java 15 - New Features
- Java 16 - New Features
Java APIs & Frameworks
Java Class References
- Java - Scanner
- Java - Arrays
- Java - Strings
- Java - Date
- Java - ArrayList
- Java - Vector
- Java - Stack
- Java - PriorityQueue
- Java - LinkedList
- Java - ArrayDeque
- Java - HashMap
- Java - LinkedHashMap
- Java - WeakHashMap
- Java - EnumMap
- Java - TreeMap
- Java - IdentityHashMap
- Java - HashSet
- Java - EnumSet
- Java - LinkedHashSet
- Java - TreeSet
- Java - BitSet
- Java - Dictionary
- Java - Hashtable
- Java - Properties
- Java - Collection
- Java - Array
Java Useful Resources
Java - Queue remove() Method
Description
The Java Queue remove() method removes first element of the list. Shifts any subsequent elements to the left (subtracts one from their indices).
Declaration
Following is the declaration for java.util.Queue.remove() method
public E remove(int index)
Parameters
NA
Return Value
This method returns the first element.
Exception
NoSuchElementException − if list is empty.
Example 1
The following example shows the usage of Java Queue remove() method. We're creating a Queue of Integers. We're adding couple of Integers to the Queue object using add() method calls per element. Queue size is printed, queue is printed and using remove() method, first element is removed. Then size and queue is printed again.
package com.tutorialspoint; import java.util.LinkedList; import java.util.Queue; public class QueueDemo { public static void main(String[] args) { // create an empty queue Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>(); // use add() method to add elements in the queue queue.add(20); queue.add(15); queue.add(30); queue.add(45); System.out.println("Size of list: " + queue.size()); // let us print all the elements available in list again System.out.println("Queue = " + queue); // Removes first element queue.remove(); System.out.println("Now, Size of list: " + queue.size()); // let us print all the elements available in list again System.out.println("Queue = " + queue); } }
Output
Let us compile and run the above program, this will produce the following result −
Size of list: 4 Queue = [20, 15, 30, 45] Now, Size of list: 3 Queue = [15, 30, 45]
Example 2
The following example shows the usage of Java Queue remove(object) method. We're creating a Queue of String. We're adding couple of Strings to the Queue object using add() method calls per element. Queue size is printed, queue is printed and using remove(object) method, an element is removed. Then size and queue is printed again.
package com.tutorialspoint; import java.util.LinkedList; import java.util.Queue; public class QueueDemo { public static void main(String[] args) { // create an empty queue Queue<String> queue = new LinkedList<>(); // use add() method to add elements in the queue queue.add("A"); queue.add("B"); queue.add("C"); queue.add("D"); System.out.println("Size of list: " + queue.size()); // let us print all the elements available in list again System.out.println("Queue = " + queue); // Removes element B queue.remove("B"); System.out.println("Now, Size of list: " + queue.size()); // let us print all the elements available in list again System.out.println("Queue = " + queue); } }
Output
Let us compile and run the above program, this will produce the following result −
Size of list: 4 Queue = [A, B, C, D] Now, Size of list: 3 Queue = [A, C, D]
Example 3
The following example shows the usage of Java Queue remove(index) method. We're creating a Queue of Student objects. We're adding couple of Students to the Queue object using add() method calls per element. Queue size is printed, queue is printed and using remove(index) method, an element is removed. Then size and queue is printed again.
package com.tutorialspoint; import java.util.LinkedList; import java.util.Queue; public class QueueDemo { public static void main(String[] args) { // create an empty queue Queue<Student> queue = new LinkedList<>(); // use add() method to add elements in the queue queue.add(new Student(1, "Julie")); queue.add(new Student(2, "Robert")); queue.add(new Student(3, "Adam")); System.out.println("Size of list: " + queue.size()); // let us print all the elements available in list again System.out.println("Queue = " + queue); // Removes element at 3rd position queue.remove(2); System.out.println("Now, Size of list: " + queue.size()); // let us print all the elements available in list again System.out.println("Queue = " + queue); } } class Student { int rollNo; String name; Student(int rollNo, String name){ this.rollNo = rollNo; this.name = name; } @Override public String toString() { return "[ " + this.rollNo + ", " + this.name + " ]"; } @Override public boolean equals(Object obj) { Student s = (Student)obj; return this.rollNo == s.rollNo && this.name.equalsIgnoreCase(s.name); } }
Output
Let us compile and run the above program, this will produce the following result −
Size of list: 3 Queue = [[ 1, Julie ], [ 2, Robert ], [ 3, Adam ]] Now, Size of list: 2 Queue = [[ 1, Julie ], [ 2, Robert ]]