This part of the Visual Basic tutorial cover Visual Basic collections.
last modified October 18, 2023
In this chapter we deal with Visual Basic collections. The .NET framework provides specialized classes for data storage and retrieval. In the previous chapter, we have described arrays. Collections are enhancement to the arrays.
There are two distinct collection types in Visual Basic. The standard collections, which are found under the System.Collections namespace and the generic collections, under System.Collections.Generic. The generic collections are more flexible and are the preferred way to work with data. The generic collections or generics were introduced in .NET framework 2.0. Generics enhance code reuse, type safety, and performance.
Generic programming is a style of computer programming in which algorithms are written in terms of to-be-specified-later types that are then instantiated when needed for specific types provided as parameters. This approach, pioneered by Ada in 1983, permits writing common functions or types that differ only in the set of types on which they operate when used, thus reducing duplication. (Wikipedia)
An ArrayList is a collection from a standard System.Collections namespace. It is a dynamic array. It provides random access to its elements. An ArrayList automatically expands as data is added. Unlike arrays, an ArrayList can hold data of multiple data types. Elements in the ArrayList are accessed via an integer index. Indexes are zero based. Indexing of elements and insertion and deletion at the end of the ArrayList takes constant time. Inserting or deleting an element in the middle of the dynamic array is more costly. It takes linear time.
Program.vb
Option Strict On
Imports System.Collections
Module Example
Class Empty
End Class
Sub Main()
Dim da As ArrayList = New ArrayList()
da.Add("Visual Basic")
da.Add(344)
da.Add(55)
da.Add(New Empty)
da.Remove(55)
For Each el As Object In da
Console.WriteLine(el)
Next
End Sub
End Module
In the above example, we have created an ArrayList collection. We have added some elements to it. They are of various data type: a string, two integers and a class object.
Imports System.Collections
In order to work with ArrayList collection, we need to import System.Collections namespace.
Dim da As ArrayList = New ArrayList()
ArrayList collection is created.
da.Add(“Visual Basic”) da.Add(344) da.Add(55) da.Add(New Empty)
We add five elements to the array with the Add method.
da.Remove(55)
We remove one element.
For Each el As Object In da Console.WriteLine(el) Next
We iterate through the array and print its elements to the console.
A List is a strongly typed list of objects that can be accessed by index. It can be found under System.Collections.Generic namespace.
Program.vb
Option Strict On
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Module Example
Sub Main()
Dim langs As New List(Of String)
langs.Add("Java")
langs.Add("C#")
langs.Add("C")
langs.Add("C++")
langs.Add("Ruby")
langs.Add("Javascript")
Console.WriteLine(langs.Contains("C#"))
Console.WriteLine(langs(1))
Console.WriteLine(langs(2))
langs.Remove("C#")
langs.Remove("C")
Console.WriteLine(langs.Contains("C#"))
langs.Insert(4, "Haskell")
langs.Sort()
For Each lang As String In langs
Console.WriteLine(lang)
Next
End Sub
End Module
In the preceding example, we work with the List collection.
Imports System.Collections.Generic
In order to work with the List collection, we need to import the System.Collections.Generic namespace.
Dim langs As New List(Of String)
A generic dynamic array is created. We specify that we work with strings with the Of keyword.
langs.Add(“Java”) langs.Add(“C#”) langs.Add(“C”) …
We add elements to the List using the Add method.
Console.WriteLine(langs.Contains(“C#”))
We check if the List contains a specific string using the Contains method.
Console.WriteLine(langs(1)) Console.WriteLine(langs(2))
We access the second and the third element of the List using the index notation.
langs.Remove(“C#”) langs.Remove(“C”)
We remove two strings from the List.
langs.Insert(4, “Haskell”)
We insert a string at a specific location.
langs.Sort()
We sort the elements using the Sort method.
$ dotnet run True C# C False C++ Haskell Java Javascript Ruby
Outcome of the example.
LinkedList is a generic doubly linked list in Visual Basic. LinkedList only allows sequential access. LinkedList allows for constant-time insertions or removals, but only sequential access of elements. Because linked lists need extra storage for references, they are impractical for lists of small data items such as characters. Unlike dynamic arrays, arbitrary number of items can be added to the linked list (limited by the memory of course) without the need to realocate, which is an expensive operation.
Program.vb
Option Strict On
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Module Example
Sub Main()
Dim nums As New LinkedList(Of Integer)
nums.AddLast(23)
nums.AddLast(34)
nums.AddLast(33)
nums.AddLast(11)
nums.AddLast(6)
nums.AddFirst(9)
nums.AddFirst(7)
Dim node as LinkedListNode(Of Integer)
node = nums.Find(6)
nums.AddBefore(node, 5)
For Each num As Integer In nums
Console.WriteLine(num)
Next
End Sub
End Module
This is a LinkedList example with some of its methods.
Dim nums As New LinkedList(Of Integer)
This is an integer LinkedList.
nums.AddLast(23) … nums.AddFirst(9)
We populate the linked list using the AddLast and AddFirst methods.
Dim node as LinkedListNode(Of Integer)
node = nums.Find(6) nums.AddBefore(node, 5)
A LinkedList consists of nodes. We find a specific node and add an element before it.
For Each num As Integer In nums Console.WriteLine(num) Next
Printing all elements to the console.
A dictionary, also called an associative array, is a collection of unique keys and a collection of values, where each key is associated with one value. Retrieving and adding values is very fast. Dictionaries take more memory, because for each value there is also a key.
Program.vb
Option Strict On
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Module Example
Sub Main()
Dim domains As New Dictionary(Of String, String)
domains.Add("de", "Germany")
domains.Add("sk", "Slovakia")
domains.Add("us", "United States")
domains.Add("ru", "Russia")
domains.Add("hu", "Hungary")
domains.Add("pl", "Poland")
Console.WriteLine(domains("sk"))
Console.WriteLine(domains("de"))
Console.WriteLine("Dictionary has {0} items", domains.Count)
Console.WriteLine("Keys of the dictionary:")
Dim keys As Dictionary(Of String, String).KeyCollection = domains.Keys
For Each key As String In keys
Console.WriteLine("{0}", key)
Next
Console.WriteLine("Values of the dictionary:")
Dim vals As Dictionary(Of String, String).ValueCollection = domains.Values
For Each val As String In vals
Console.WriteLine("{0}", val)
Next
Console.WriteLine("Keys and values of the dictionary:")
For Each kvp As KeyValuePair(Of String, String) In domains
Console.WriteLine("Key = {0}, Value = {1}",
kvp.Key, kvp.Value)
Next
End Sub
End Module
We have a dictionary, where we map domain names to their country names.
Dim domains As New Dictionary(Of String, String)
We create a dictionary with string keys and values.
domains.Add(“de”, “Germany”) domains.Add(“sk”, “Slovakia”) domains.Add(“us”, “United States”) …
We add some data to the dictionary. The first string is the key. The second is the value.
Console.WriteLine(domains(“sk”)) Console.WriteLine(domains(“de”))
Here we retrieve two values by their keys.
Console.WriteLine(“Dictionary has {0} items”, domains.Count)
We print the number of items by referring to the Count property.
Dim keys As Dictionary(Of String, String).KeyCollection = domains.Keys
For Each key As String In keys Console.WriteLine("{0}", key) Next
These lines retrieve all keys from the dictionary.
Dim vals As Dictionary(Of String, String).ValueCollection = domains.Values
For Each val As String In vals Console.WriteLine("{0}", val) Next
These lines retrieve all values from the dictionary.
For Each kvp As KeyValuePair(Of String, String) In domains Console.WriteLine(“Key = {0}, Value = {1}”, kvp.Key, kvp.Value) Next
Finally, we print both keys and values of the dictionary.
$ dotnet run Slovakia Germany Dictionary has 6 items Keys of the dictionary: de sk us ru hu pl Values of the dictionary: Germany Slovakia United States Russia Hungary Poland Keys and values of the dictionary: Key = de, Value = Germany Key = sk, Value = Slovakia Key = us, Value = United States Key = ru, Value = Russia Key = hu, Value = Hungary Key = pl, Value = Poland
A queue is a First-In-First-Out (FIFO) data structure. The first element added to the queue will be the first one to be removed. Queues may be used to process messages as they appear or serve customers as they come. The first customer which comes should be served first.
Program.vb
Option Strict On
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Module Example
Sub Main()
Dim msgs As New Queue(Of String)
msgs.Enqueue("Message 1")
msgs.Enqueue("Message 2")
msgs.Enqueue("Message 3")
msgs.Enqueue("Message 4")
msgs.Enqueue("Message 5")
Console.WriteLine(msgs.Dequeue())
Console.WriteLine(msgs.Peek())
Console.WriteLine(msgs.Peek())
Console.WriteLine()
For Each msg As String In msgs
Console.WriteLine(msg)
Next
End Sub
End Module
In our example, we have a queue with messages.
Dim msgs As New Queue(Of String)
A queue of strings is created.
msgs.Enqueue(“Message 1”) msgs.Enqueue(“Message 2”) …
The Enqueue adds a message to the end of the queue.
Console.WriteLine(msgs.Dequeue())
The Dequeue method removes and returns the item at the beginning of the queue.
Console.WriteLine(msgs.Peek())
The Peek method returns the next item from the queue, but does not remove it from the collection.
$ dotnet run Message 1 Message 2 Message 2
Message 2 Message 3 Message 4 Message 5
The Dequeue method removes the “Message 1” from the collection. The Peek method does not. The “Message 2” remains in the collection.
A stack is a Last-In-First-Out (LIFO) data structure. The last element added to the queue will be the first one to be removed. The C language uses a stack to store local data in a function. The stack is also used when implementing calculators.
Program.vb
Option Strict On
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Module Example
Sub Main()
Dim stc As New Stack(Of Integer)
stc.Push(1)
stc.Push(4)
stc.Push(3)
stc.Push(6)
stc.Push(4)
Console.WriteLine(stc.Pop())
Console.WriteLine(stc.Peek())
Console.WriteLine(stc.Peek())
Console.WriteLine()
For Each item As Integer In stc
Console.WriteLine(item)
Next
End Sub
End Module
We have a simple stack example above.
Dim stc As New Stack(Of Integer)
A Stack data structure is created.
stc.Push(1) stc.Push(4) …
The Push method adds an item at the top of the stack.
Console.WriteLine(stc.Pop())
The Pop method removes and returns the item from the top of the stack.
Console.WriteLine(stc.Peek())
The Peek method returns the item from the top of the stack. It does not remove it.
$ dotnet run 4 6 6
6 3 4 1
This part of the Visual Basic tutorial was dedicated to Collections in Visual Basic.