List of data structures

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of well-known data structures. For a wider list of terms, see list of terms relating to algorithms and data structures. For a comparison of running times for a subset of this list see comparison of data structures.

Data types[edit]

Primitive types[edit]

Composite types or non-primitive type[edit]

  • Array, a sequence of elements of the same type stored contiguously in memory
  • Record (also called a structure or struct), a collection of fields
    • Product type (also called a tuple), a record in which the fields are not named
  • String, a sequence of characters representing text
  • Union, a datum which may be one of a set of types
  • Tagged union (also called a variant, discriminated union or sum type), a union with a tag specifying which type the data is

Abstract data types[edit]

Some properties of abstract data types:

Structure Ordered? Uniqueness?
List yes no
Associative array no keys (indexes) only
Set no yes
Stack yes no
Multimap no no
Multiset (bag) no no
Queue yes no

"Ordered" means that the elements of the data type have some kind of explicit order to them, where an element can be considered "before" or "after" another element. This order is usually determined by the order in which the elements are added to the structure, but the elements can be rearranged in some contexts, such as sorting a list. For a structure that isn't ordered, on the other hand, no assumptions can be made about the ordering of the elements (although a physical implementation of these data types will often apply some kind of arbitrary ordering). "Uniqueness" means that duplicate elements are not allowed. Depending on the implementation of the data type, attempting to add a duplicate element may either be ignored, overwrite the existing element, or raise an error. The detection for duplicates is based on some inbuilt (or alternatively, user-defined) rule for comparing elements.

Linear data structures[edit]

A data structure is said to be linear if its elements form a sequence.

Arrays[edit]

Lists[edit]

Trees[edit]

Trees are a subset of directed acyclic graphs.

Binary trees[edit]

B-trees[edit]

Heaps[edit]

Bit-slice trees[edit]

In these data structures each tree node compares a bit slice of key values.

Multi-way trees[edit]

Space-partitioning trees[edit]

These are data structures used for space partitioning or binary space partitioning.

Application-specific trees[edit]

Hash-based structures[edit]

Graphs[edit]

Many graph-based data structures are used in computer science and related fields:

Other[edit]

See also[edit]

External links[edit]