Open In App

ArrayDeque pollFirst() Method in Java

Improve
Improve
Like Article
Like
Save
Share
Report

The java.util.ArrayDeque.pollFirst() method in Java is used to retrieve or fetch and remove the first element of the Deque. The peekFirst() method only retrieved the first element but the pollFirst() also removes the element along with the retrieval. It returns NULL if the deque is empty.

Syntax:

Array_Deque.pollFirst()

Parameters: The method does not take any parameter.

Return Value: The method removes the first element of the Deque and returns the same. It returns NULL if the deque is empty.

Below programs illustrate the Java.util.ArrayDeque.pollFirst() method:
Program 1:




// Java code to illustrate pollFirst()
import java.util.*;
  
public class ArrayDequeDemo {
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
        // Creating an empty ArrayDeque
        Deque<String> de_que = new ArrayDeque<String>();
  
        // Use add() method to add elements into the Deque
        de_que.add("Welcome");
        de_que.add("To");
        de_que.add("Geeks");
        de_que.add("4");
        de_que.add("Geeks");
  
        // Displaying the ArrayDeque
        System.out.println("ArrayDeque: " + de_que);
  
        // Displaying the first element
        System.out.println("The element at head is: "
                                     de_que.pollFirst());
  
        // Displaying the final ArrayDeque
        System.out.println("ArrayDeque after operation: " 
                                                + de_que);
    }
}


Output:

ArrayDeque: [Welcome, To, Geeks, 4, Geeks]
The element at head is: Welcome
ArrayDeque after operation: [To, Geeks, 4, Geeks]

Program 2:




// Java code to illustrate pollFirst()
import java.util.*;
  
public class ArrayDequeDemo {
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
        // Creating an empty ArrayDeque
        Deque<Integer> de_que = new ArrayDeque<Integer>();
  
        // Use add() method to add elements into the Deque
        de_que.add(10);
        de_que.add(15);
        de_que.add(30);
        de_que.add(20);
        de_que.add(5);
  
        // Displaying the ArrayDeque
        System.out.println("ArrayDeque: " + de_que);
  
        // Displaying the first element
        System.out.println("The element at head is: "
                                    de_que.pollFirst());
  
        // Displaying the final ArrayDeque
        System.out.println("ArrayDeque after operation: " 
                                                + de_que);
    }
}


Output:

ArrayDeque: [10, 15, 30, 20, 5]
The element at head is: 10
ArrayDeque after operation: [15, 30, 20, 5]

Program 3: For an empty deque:




// Java code to illustrate pollFirst()
import java.util.*;
  
public class ArrayDequeDemo {
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
        // Creating an empty ArrayDeque
        Deque<Integer> de_que = new ArrayDeque<Integer>();
  
        // Displaying the ArrayDeque
        System.out.println("ArrayDeque: " + de_que);
  
        // Displaying the first
        System.out.println("The element at head is: "
                                      de_que.pollFirst());
    }
}


Output:

ArrayDeque: []
The element at head is: null


Last Updated : 10 Dec, 2018
Like Article
Save Article
Previous
Next
Share your thoughts in the comments
Similar Reads