E - the type of elements held in this collectionpublic interface Queue<E> extends Collection<E>
Collection operations,
 queues provide additional insertion, extraction, and inspection
 operations.  Each of these methods exists in two forms: one throws
 an exception if the operation fails, the other returns a special
 value (either null or false, depending on the
 operation).  The latter form of the insert operation is designed
 specifically for use with capacity-restricted Queue
 implementations; in most implementations, insert operations cannot
 fail.
 | Throws exception | Returns special value | |
| Insert | add(e) | offer(e) | 
| Remove | remove() | poll() | 
| Examine | element() | peek() | 
Queues typically, but do not necessarily, order elements in a
 FIFO (first-in-first-out) manner.  Among the exceptions are
 priority queues, which order elements according to a supplied
 comparator, or the elements' natural ordering, and LIFO queues (or
 stacks) which order the elements LIFO (last-in-first-out).
 Whatever the ordering used, the head of the queue is that
 element which would be removed by a call to remove() or
 poll().  In a FIFO queue, all new elements are inserted at
 the tail of the queue. Other kinds of queues may use
 different placement rules.  Every Queue implementation
 must specify its ordering properties.
 
The offer method inserts an element if possible,
 otherwise returning false.  This differs from the Collection.add method, which can fail to
 add an element only by throwing an unchecked exception.  The
 offer method is designed for use when failure is a normal,
 rather than exceptional occurrence, for example, in fixed-capacity
 (or "bounded") queues.
 
The remove() and poll() methods remove and
 return the head of the queue.
 Exactly which element is removed from the queue is a
 function of the queue's ordering policy, which differs from
 implementation to implementation. The remove() and
 poll() methods differ only in their behavior when the
 queue is empty: the remove() method throws an exception,
 while the poll() method returns null.
 
The element() and peek() methods return, but do
 not remove, the head of the queue.
 
The Queue interface does not define the blocking queue
 methods, which are common in concurrent programming.  These methods,
 which wait for elements to appear or for space to become available, are
 defined in the BlockingQueue interface, which
 extends this interface.
 
Queue implementations generally do not allow insertion
 of null elements, although some implementations, such as
 LinkedList, do not prohibit insertion of null.
 Even in the implementations that permit it, null should
 not be inserted into a Queue, as null is also
 used as a special return value by the poll method to
 indicate that the queue contains no elements.
 
Queue implementations generally do not define
 element-based versions of methods equals and
 hashCode but instead inherit the identity based versions
 from class Object, because element-based equality is not
 always well-defined for queues with the same elements but different
 ordering properties.
 
This interface is a member of the Java Collections Framework.
Collection, 
LinkedList, 
PriorityQueue, 
LinkedBlockingQueue, 
BlockingQueue, 
ArrayBlockingQueue, 
LinkedBlockingQueue, 
PriorityBlockingQueue| Modifier and Type | Method | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| boolean | add(E e) | Inserts the specified element into this queue if it is possible to do so
 immediately without violating capacity restrictions, returning
  trueupon success and throwing anIllegalStateExceptionif no space is currently available. | 
| E | element() | Retrieves, but does not remove, the head of this queue. | 
| boolean | offer(E e) | Inserts the specified element into this queue if it is possible to do
 so immediately without violating capacity restrictions. | 
| E | peek() | Retrieves, but does not remove, the head of this queue,
 or returns  nullif this queue is empty. | 
| E | poll() | Retrieves and removes the head of this queue,
 or returns  nullif this queue is empty. | 
| E | remove() | Retrieves and removes the head of this queue. | 
addAll, clear, contains, containsAll, equals, hashCode, isEmpty, iterator, parallelStream, remove, removeAll, removeIf, retainAll, size, spliterator, stream, toArray, toArrayboolean add(E e)
true upon success and throwing an IllegalStateException
 if no space is currently available.add in interface Collection<E>e - the element to addtrue (as specified by Collection.add(E))IllegalStateException - if the element cannot be added at this
         time due to capacity restrictionsClassCastException - if the class of the specified element
         prevents it from being added to this queueNullPointerException - if the specified element is null and
         this queue does not permit null elementsIllegalArgumentException - if some property of this element
         prevents it from being added to this queueboolean offer(E e)
add(E), which can fail to insert an element only
 by throwing an exception.e - the element to addtrue if the element was added to this queue, else
         falseClassCastException - if the class of the specified element
         prevents it from being added to this queueNullPointerException - if the specified element is null and
         this queue does not permit null elementsIllegalArgumentException - if some property of this element
         prevents it from being added to this queueE remove()
poll only in that it throws an exception if this
 queue is empty.NoSuchElementException - if this queue is emptyE poll()
null if this queue is empty.null if this queue is emptyE element()
peek only in that it throws an exception
 if this queue is empty.NoSuchElementException - if this queue is emptyE peek()
null if this queue is empty.null if this queue is empty Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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