Stack

From Rosetta Code
Task
Stack
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.

Data Structure
This illustrates a data structure, a means of storing data within a program.

You may see other such structures in the Data Structures category.

A stack is a container of elements with   last in, first out   access policy.   Sometimes it also called LIFO.

The stack is accessed through its top.

The basic stack operations are:

  •   push   stores a new element onto the stack top;
  •   pop   returns the last pushed stack element, while removing it from the stack;
  •   empty   tests if the stack contains no elements.


Sometimes the last pushed stack element is made accessible for immutable access (for read) or mutable access (for write):

  •   top   (sometimes called peek to keep with the p theme) returns the topmost element without modifying the stack.


Stacks allow a very simple hardware implementation.

They are common in almost all processors.

In programming, stacks are also very popular for their way (LIFO) of resource management, usually memory.

Nested scopes of language objects are naturally implemented by a stack (sometimes by multiple stacks).

This is a classical way to implement local variables of a re-entrant or recursive subprogram. Stacks are also used to describe a formal computational framework.

See stack machine.

Many algorithms in pattern matching, compiler construction (e.g. recursive descent parsers), and machine learning (e.g. based on tree traversal) have a natural representation in terms of stacks.


Task

Create a stack supporting the basic operations: push, pop, empty.


See also



ActionScript

In ActionScript an Array object provides stack functionality. <lang actionscript>var stack:Array = new Array(); stack.push(1); stack.push(2); trace(stack.pop()); // outputs "2" trace(stack.pop()); // outputs "1"</lang>

Ada

This is a generic stack implementation. <lang ada>generic

  type Element_Type is private; 

package Generic_Stack is

  type Stack is private; 
  procedure Push (Item : Element_Type; Onto : in out Stack); 
  procedure Pop (Item : out Element_Type; From : in out Stack); 
  function Create return Stack;
  Stack_Empty_Error : exception;

private

  type Node; 
  type Stack is access Node; 
  type Node is record 
     Element : Element_Type;  
     Next    : Stack        := null;  
  end record; 

end Generic_Stack;</lang> <lang ada>with Ada.Unchecked_Deallocation;

package body Generic_Stack is

  ------------
  -- Create --
  ------------
  
  function Create return Stack is
  begin
     return (null);
  end Create;
  ----------
  -- Push --
  ----------
  procedure Push(Item : Element_Type; Onto : in out Stack) is
     Temp : Stack := new Node;
  begin
     Temp.Element := Item;
     Temp.Next := Onto;
     Onto := Temp; 
  end Push;
  ---------
  -- Pop --
  ---------
  procedure Pop(Item : out Element_Type; From : in out Stack) is
     procedure Free is new Ada.Unchecked_Deallocation(Node, Stack);
     Temp : Stack := From;
  begin
     if Temp = null then
        raise Stack_Empty_Error;
     end if;
     Item := Temp.Element;
     From := Temp.Next;
     Free(Temp);
  end Pop;

end Generic_Stack;</lang>

ALGOL 68

ALGOL 68: Using linked list

ALGOL 68 uses "HEAP" variables for new LINKs in a linked list. Generally ALGOL 68's garbage collector should recover the LINK memory some time after a value is popped.

Works with: ALGOL 68 version Revision 1 - one extension to language used - PRAGMA READ - a non standard feature similar to C's #include directive.
Works with: ALGOL 68G version Any - tested with release algol68g-2.7.

File: prelude/next_link.a68<lang algol68># -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # CO REQUIRES:

 MODE OBJVALUE = ~ # Mode/type of actual obj to be stacked #

END CO

MODE OBJNEXTLINK = STRUCT(

 REF OBJNEXTLINK next,
 OBJVALUE value # ... etc. required #

);

PROC obj nextlink new = REF OBJNEXTLINK:

 HEAP OBJNEXTLINK;

PROC obj nextlink free = (REF OBJNEXTLINK free)VOID:

 next OF free := obj stack empty # give the garbage collector a BIG hint #</lang>File: prelude/stack_base.a68<lang algol68># -*- coding: utf-8 -*- #

CO REQUIRES:

 MODE OBJNEXTLINK = STRUCT(
   REF OBJNEXTLINK next,
   OBJVALUE value
 );
 PROC obj nextlink new = REF OBJNEXTLINK: ~,
 PROC obj nextlink free = (REF OBJNEXTLINK free)VOID: ~

END CO

  1. actually a pointer to the last LINK, there ITEMs are ADDED, pushed & popped #

MODE OBJSTACK = REF OBJNEXTLINK;

OBJSTACK obj stack empty = NIL;

BOOL obj stack par = FALSE; # make code thread safe # SEMA obj stack sema = LEVEL ABS obj stack par;

  1. Warning: 1 SEMA for all stacks of type obj, i.e. not 1 SEMA per stack #

PROC obj stack init = (REF OBJSTACK self)REF OBJSTACK:

 self := obj stack empty;
  1. see if the program/coder wants the OBJ problem mended... #

PROC (REF OBJSTACK #self#)BOOL obj stack index error mended

 := (REF OBJSTACK self)BOOL: (abend("obj stack index error"); stop);

PROC on obj stack index error = (REF OBJSTACK self, PROC(REF OBJSTACK #self#)BOOL mended)VOID:

 obj stack index error mended := mended;

PROC obj stack push = (REF OBJSTACK self, OBJVALUE obj)REF OBJSTACK:(

 IF obj stack par THEN DOWN obj stack sema FI;
 self := obj nextlink new := (self, obj);
 IF obj stack par THEN UP obj stack sema FI;
 self

);

  1. aliases: define a useful put (+=:) operator... #

OP +=: = (OBJVALUE obj, REF OBJSTACK self)REF OBJSTACK: obj stack push(self, obj);

PROC obj stack pop = (REF OBJSTACK self)OBJVALUE: (

  1. DOWN obj stack sema; #
 IF self IS obj stack empty THEN
   IF NOT obj stack index error mended(self) THEN abend("obj stack index error") FI FI;
 OBJNEXTLINK old head := self;
 OBJSTACK new head := next OF self;
 OBJVALUE out := value OF old head;
 obj nextlink free(old head); # freeing nextlink, NOT queue! #
 self := new head;
  1. UP obj stack sema; #
 out

);

PROC obj stack is empty = (REF OBJSTACK self)BOOL:

 self IS obj stack empty;

SKIP</lang>File: test/data_stigler_diet.a68<lang algol68># -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # MODE DIETITEM = STRUCT(

 STRING food, annual quantity, units, REAL cost

);

  1. Stigler's 1939 Diet ... #

FORMAT diet item fmt = $g": "g" "g" = $"zd.dd$; []DIETITEM stigler diet = (

 ("Cabbage",           "111","lb.",  4.11),
 ("Dried Navy Beans",  "285","lb.", 16.80),
 ("Evaporated Milk",    "57","cans", 3.84),
 ("Spinach",            "23","lb.",  1.85),
 ("Wheat Flour",       "370","lb.", 13.33),
 ("Total Annual Cost",    "","",    39.93)

)</lang>File: test/stack.a68<lang algol68>#!/usr/bin/a68g --script #

  1. -*- coding: utf-8 -*- #

MODE OBJVALUE = DIETITEM; PR read "prelude/next_link.a68" PR; PR read "prelude/stack_base.a68" PR;

PR read "test/data_stigler_diet.a68" PR; OBJSTACK example stack; obj stack init(example stack);

FOR i TO UPB stigler diet DO

  1. obj stack push(example stack, stigler diet[i]) #
 stigler diet[i] +=: example stack

OD;

printf($"Items popped in reverse:"l$); WHILE NOT obj stack is empty(example stack) DO

  1. OR example stack ISNT obj stack empty #
 printf((diet item fmt, obj stack pop(example stack), $l$))

OD</lang>

Output:
Items popped in reverse:
Total Annual Cost:   = $39.93
Wheat Flour: 370 lb. = $13.33
Spinach: 23 lb. = $ 1.85
Evaporated Milk: 57 cans = $ 3.84
Dried Navy Beans: 285 lb. = $16.80
Cabbage: 111 lb. = $ 4.11

See also: Queue

ALGOL 68: Using FLEX array

An alternative to using a linked list is to use a FLEX array. <lang algol68> MODE DIETITEM = STRUCT (

 STRING food, annual quantity, units, REAL cost

);

MODE OBJVALUE = DIETITEM;

  1. PUSH element to stack #

OP +:= = (REF FLEX[]OBJVALUE stack, OBJVALUE item) VOID:

  BEGIN
     FLEX[UPB stack + 1]OBJVALUE newstack;
     newstack[2:UPB newstack] := stack;
     newstack[1] := item;
     stack := newstack
  END;

OP POP = (REF FLEX[]OBJVALUE stack) OBJVALUE:

  IF UPB stack > 0 THEN
     OBJVALUE result = stack[1];
     stack := stack[2:UPB stack];
     result
  ELSE
     # raise index error; # SKIP 
  FI;
  1. Stigler's 1939 Diet ... #

FORMAT diet item fmt = $g": "g" "g" = $"zd.dd$; []DIETITEM stigler diet = (

 ("Cabbage",           "111","lb.",  4.11),
 ("Dried Navy Beans",  "285","lb.", 16.80),
 ("Evaporated Milk",    "57","cans", 3.84),
 ("Spinach",            "23","lb.",  1.85),
 ("Wheat Flour",       "370","lb.", 13.33),
 ("Total Annual Cost",    "","",    39.93)

);

FLEX[0]DIETITEM example stack;

FOR i TO UPB stigler diet DO

  example stack +:= stigler diet[i]

OD;

printf($"Items popped in reverse:"l$); WHILE UPB example stack > 0 DO

 printf((diet item fmt, POP example stack, $l$))

OD </lang>

Output:
Items popped in reverse:
Total Annual Cost:   = $39.93
Wheat Flour: 370 lb. = $13.33
Spinach: 23 lb. = $ 1.85
Evaporated Milk: 57 cans = $ 3.84
Dried Navy Beans: 285 lb. = $16.80
Cabbage: 111 lb. = $ 4.11

Applesoft BASIC

<lang basic>100 DIM STACK$(1000) 110 DATA "(2*A)","PI","","TO BE OR","NOT TO BE" 120 FOR I = 1 TO 5 130 READ ELEMENT$ 140 GOSUB 500_PUSH 150 NEXT 200 GOSUB 400 POP AND PRINT 210 GOSUB 300_EMPTY AND PRINT 220 FOR I = 1 TO 4 230 GOSUB 400 POP AND PRINT 240 NEXT 250 GOSUB 300_EMPTY AND PRINT 260 END 300 GOSUB 700_EMPTY 310 PRINT "STACK IS "; 320 IF NOT EMPTY THEN PRINT "NOT "; 330 PRINT "EMPTY" 340 RETURN 400 GOSUB 600 POP 410 PRINT ELEMENT$ 420 RETURN 500 REM 510 REM PUSH 520 REM 530 LET STACK$(SP) = ELEMENT$ 540 LET SP = SP + 1 550 RETURN 600 REM 610 REM POP 620 REM 630 IF SP THEN SP = SP - 1 640 LET ELEMENT$ = STACK$(SP) 650 LET STACK$(SP) = "" 660 RETURN 700 REM 710 REM EMPTY 720 REM 730 LET EMPTY = SP = 0 740 RETURN </lang>

Output:
NOT TO BE
STACK IS NOT EMPTY
TO BE OR

PI
(2*A)
STACK IS EMPTY

AutoHotkey

<lang AutoHotkey>msgbox % stack("push", 4) msgbox % stack("push", 5) msgbox % stack("peek") msgbox % stack("pop") msgbox % stack("peek") msgbox % stack("empty") msgbox % stack("pop") msgbox % stack("empty") return

stack(command, value = 0) {

 static 

if !pointer pointer = 10000

 if (command = "push")
 {
 _p%pointer% := value
 pointer -= 1 
 return value
 }
 if (command = "pop")
 {
   pointer += 1
   return _p%pointer%
 }
 if (command = "peek")

{ next := pointer + 1 return _p%next% }

 if (command = "empty")
 {
  if (pointer == 10000)
   return "empty"

else return 0

 }

}</lang>

Axe

<lang axe>0→S Lbl PUSH r₁→{L₁+S}ʳ S+2→S Return

Lbl POP S-2→S {L₁+S}ʳ Return

Lbl EMPTY S≤≤0 Return</lang>

Babel

<lang babel>main :

   { (1 2 3) foo set     -- foo = (1 2 3)
   4 foo push            -- foo = (1 2 3 4)
   0 foo unshift         -- foo = (0 1 2 3 4)
   foo pop               -- foo = (0 1 2 3)
   foo shift             -- foo = (1 2 3)
   check_foo
   { foo pop } 4 times   -- Pops too many times, but this is OK and Babel won't complain
   check_foo }

empty? : nil? -- just aliases 'empty?' to the built-in operator 'nil?'

check_foo! :

   { "foo is " 
   {foo empty?) {nil} {"not " .} ifte 
   "empty" . 
   cr << }

</lang>

Output:
foo is not empty
foo is empty

Batch File

This implementation uses an environment variable naming convention to implement a stack as a pseudo object containing a pseudo dynamic array and top attribute, as well as an empty "method" that is a sort of macro. The implementation depends on delayed expansion being enabled at the time of each call to a stack function. More complex variations can be written that remove this limitation. <lang dos>@echo off setlocal enableDelayedExpansion

LIFO stack usage
Define the stack

call :newStack myStack

Push some values onto the stack

for %%A in (value1 value2 value3) do call :pushStack myStack %%A

Test if stack is empty by examining the top "attribute"

if myStack.top==0 (echo myStack is empty) else (echo myStack is NOT empty)

Peek at the top stack value

call:peekStack myStack val && echo a peek at the top of myStack shows !val!

Pop the top stack value

call :popStack myStack val && echo popped myStack value=!val!

Push some more values onto the stack

for %%A in (value4 value5 value6) do call :pushStack myStack %%A

Process the remainder of the stack
processStack

call :popStack myStack val || goto :stackEmpty echo popped myStack value=!val! goto :processStack

stackEmpty
Test if stack is empty using the empty "method"/"macro". Use of the
second IF statement serves to demonstrate the negation of the empty
"method". A single IF could have been used with an ELSE clause instead.

if %myStack.empty% echo myStack is empty if not %myStack.empty% echo myStack is NOT empty exit /b

LIFO stack definition
newStack stackName

set /a %~1.top=0

Define an empty "method" for this stack as a sort of macro

set "%~1.empty=^!%~1.top^! == 0" exit /b

pushStack stackName value

set /a %~1.top+=1 set %~1.!%~1.top!=%2 exit /b

popStack stackName returnVar
Sets errorlevel to 0 if success
Sets errorlevel to 1 if failure because stack was empty

if !%~1.top! equ 0 exit /b 1 for %%N in (!%~1.top!) do (

 set %~2=!%~1.%%N!
 set %~1.%%N=

) set /a %~1.top-=1 exit /b 0

peekStack stackName returnVar
Sets errorlevel to 0 if success
Sets errorlevel to 1 if failure because stack was empty

if !%~1.top! equ 0 exit /b 1 for %%N in (!%~1.top!) do set %~2=!%~1.%%N! exit /b 0</lang>

BBC BASIC

<lang bbcbasic> STACKSIZE = 1000

     FOR n = 3 TO 5
       PRINT "Push ";n : PROCpush(n)
     NEXT
     PRINT "Pop " ; FNpop
     PRINT "Push 6" : PROCpush(6)
     REPEAT
       PRINT "Pop " ; FNpop
     UNTIL FNisempty
     PRINT "Pop " ; FNpop
     END
     
     DEF PROCpush(n) : LOCAL f%
     DEF FNpop : LOCAL f% : f% = 1
     DEF FNisempty : LOCAL f% : f% = 2
     PRIVATE stack(), sptr%
     DIM stack(STACKSIZE-1)
     CASE f% OF
       WHEN 0:
         IF sptr% = DIM(stack(),1) ERROR 100, "Error: stack overflowed"
         stack(sptr%) = n
         sptr% += 1
       WHEN 1:
         IF sptr% = 0 ERROR 101, "Error: stack empty"
         sptr% -= 1
         = stack(sptr%)
       WHEN 2:
         = (sptr% = 0)
     ENDCASE
     ENDPROC</lang>
Output:
Push 3
Push 4
Push 5
Pop 5
Push 6
Pop 6
Pop 4
Pop 3
Pop
Error: stack empty

beeswax

Beeswax is a stack-based language. The instruction pointers (bees) carry small local stacks (lstacks) of fixed length 3 that can interact with the global stack (gstack) of unrestricted length. The local stacks do not behave exactly like the stack specified in this task, but the global stack does.

Push (1): f pushes the topmost value of lstack on gstack.

     instruction: _f

     gstack:      UInt64[0]•         (at the beginning of a program lstack is initialized to [0 0 0]

Push (2): e pushes all three lstack values on gstack, in reversed order.

     instruction: _e

     gstack:      UInt64[0 0 0]•         (at the beginning of a program lstack is initialized to [0 0 0]

Push (3): i pushes an integer from STDIN as UInt64 value on gstack.

     instruction: _i
     input:       i123

     gstack:      UInt64[123]•

Push (4): c pushes the Unicode codepoint value of a character from STDIN as UInt64 value on gstack.

     instruction: _c
     input:       cH

     gstack:      UInt64[72]•

Push (5): V pushes the Unicode codepoint values of the characters of a string given at STDIN as UInt64 values on gstack, last character, followed by newline on top.

     instruction: _V
     input:       sHello, α∀

     gstack:      UInt64[72 101 108 108 111 44 32 945 8704 10]•

Pop: g{? reads the top value of gstack and stores it on top of lstack. Then outputs top value of lstack to STDOUT and finally pops gstack.

Empty: Ag?';`gstack is empty` pushes length of gstack on gstack, reads top value of gstack, stores it as top value of lstack and prints gstack is empty if lstack top=0.

Top: g{ reads the top value of gstack, stores it on top of lstack. Then outputs top value of lstack to STDOUT. If gstack is empty, this instruction does not do anything but return the topmost value of lstack.

To make sure that there is any value on gstack, you would need to check for gstack length first, using the method shown in the “Empty” example above:

*Ag'{`gstack empty, no value to return`

This method returns the top value of gstack only if gstack is not empty, otherwise it outputs gstack empty, no value to return to STDOUT.

Bracmat

A stack is easiest implemented as a dotted list top.top-1.top-2.[...].. In the example below we also introduce a 'class' stack, instantiated in the 'object' Stack. The class has a member variable S and methods push,pop, top and empty. As a side note, . is to .. as C's . is to ->. In a method's body, its refers to the object itself. (Analogous to (*this) in C++.) <lang bracmat>( ( stack

 =   (S=)
     (push=.(!arg.!(its.S)):?(its.S))
     ( pop
     = top.!(its.S):(%?top.?(its.S))&!top
     )
     (top=top.!(its.S):(%?top.?)&!top)
     (empty=.!(its.S):)
 )

& new$stack:?Stack & (Stack..push)$(2*a) & (Stack..push)$pi & (Stack..push)$ & (Stack..push)$"to be or" & (Stack..push)$"not to be" & out$((Stack..pop)$|"Cannot pop (a)") & out$((Stack..top)$|"Cannot pop (b)") & out$((Stack..pop)$|"Cannot pop (c)") & out$((Stack..pop)$|"Cannot pop (d)") & out$((Stack..pop)$|"Cannot pop (e)") & out$((Stack..pop)$|"Cannot pop (f)") & out$((Stack..pop)$|"Cannot pop (g)") & out$((Stack..pop)$|"Cannot pop (h)") & out

 $ ( str
   $ ( "Stack is "
       ((Stack..empty)$&|not)
       " empty"
     )
   )

& );</lang>

Output:
not to be
to be or
to be or

pi
2*a
Cannot pop (g)
Cannot pop (h)
Stack is  empty

Brat

Built in arrays have push, pop, and empty? methods:

<lang Brat>stack = [] stack.push 1 stack.push 2 stack.push 3

until { stack.empty? } { p stack.pop }</lang>

Output:
3
2
1

C

Macro expanding to type flexible stack routines. <lang c>#include <stdio.h>

  1. include <stdlib.h>

/* to read expanded code, run through cpp | indent -st */

  1. define DECL_STACK_TYPE(type, name) \

typedef struct stk_##name##_t{type *buf; size_t alloc,len;}*stk_##name; \ stk_##name stk_##name##_create(size_t init_size) { \ stk_##name s; if (!init_size) init_size = 4; \ s = malloc(sizeof(struct stk_##name##_t)); \ if (!s) return 0; \ s->buf = malloc(sizeof(type) * init_size); \ if (!s->buf) { free(s); return 0; } \ s->len = 0, s->alloc = init_size; \ return s; } \ int stk_##name##_push(stk_##name s, type item) { \ type *tmp; \ if (s->len >= s->alloc) { \ tmp = realloc(s->buf, s->alloc*2*sizeof(type)); \ if (!tmp) return -1; s->buf = tmp; \ s->alloc *= 2; } \ s->buf[s->len++] = item; \ return s->len; } \ type stk_##name##_pop(stk_##name s) { \ type tmp; \ if (!s->len) abort(); \ tmp = s->buf[--s->len]; \ if (s->len * 2 <= s->alloc && s->alloc >= 8) { \ s->alloc /= 2; \ s->buf = realloc(s->buf, s->alloc * sizeof(type));} \ return tmp; } \ void stk_##name##_delete(stk_##name s) { \ free(s->buf); free(s); }

  1. define stk_empty(s) (!(s)->len)
  2. define stk_size(s) ((s)->len)

DECL_STACK_TYPE(int, int)

int main(void) { int i; stk_int stk = stk_int_create(0);

printf("pushing: "); for (i = 'a'; i <= 'z'; i++) { printf(" %c", i); stk_int_push(stk, i); }

printf("\nsize now: %d", stk_size(stk)); printf("\nstack is%s empty\n", stk_empty(stk) ? "" : " not");

printf("\npoppoing:"); while (stk_size(stk)) printf(" %c", stk_int_pop(stk)); printf("\nsize now: %d", stk_size(stk)); printf("\nstack is%s empty\n", stk_empty(stk) ? "" : " not");

/* stk_int_pop(stk); <-- will abort() */ stk_int_delete(stk); return 0; }</lang>

Or

<lang c>#include <stdio.h>

  1. include <stdlib.h>
  2. include <stddef.h>
  3. include <stdbool.h>
  1. define check_pointer(p) if (!p) {puts("Out of memory."); exit(EXIT_FAILURE);}
  1. define MINIMUM_SIZE 1
/* Minimal stack size (expressed in number of elements) for which
space is allocated. It should be at least 1. */
  1. define GROWTH_FACTOR 2
/* How much more memory is allocated each time a stack grows
out of its allocated segment. */

typedef int T;

// The type of the stack elements.

typedef struct

{T *bottom;
 T *top;
 T *allocated_top;} stack;

stack * new(void) /* Creates a new stack. */

{stack *s = malloc(sizeof(stack));
 check_pointer(s);
 s->bottom = malloc(MINIMUM_SIZE * sizeof(T));
 check_pointer(s->bottom);
 s->top = s->bottom - 1;
 s->allocated_top = s->bottom + MINIMUM_SIZE - 1;
 return s;}

void destroy(stack *s) /* Frees all the memory used for a stack. */

{free(s->bottom);
 free(s);}

bool empty(stack *s) /* Returns true iff there are no elements on the stack. This is different from the stack not having enough memory reserved for even one element, which case is never allowed to arise. */

{return s->top < s->bottom ? true : false;}

void push(stack *s, T x) /* Puts a new element on the stack, enlarging the latter's memory allowance if necessary. */

{if (s->top == s->allocated_top)
    {ptrdiff_t qtty = s->top - s->bottom + 1;
     ptrdiff_t new_qtty = GROWTH_FACTOR * qtty;
     s->bottom = realloc(s->bottom, new_qtty * sizeof(T));
     check_pointer(s->bottom);
     s->top = s->bottom + qtty - 1;
     s->allocated_top = s->bottom + new_qtty - 1;}
 *(++s->top) = x;}

T pop(stack *s) /* Removes and returns the topmost element. The result of popping an empty stack is undefined. */

{return *(s->top--);}

void compress(stack *s) /* Frees any memory the stack isn't actually using. The allocated portion still isn't allowed to shrink smaller than MINIMUM_SIZE. If all the stack's memory is in use, nothing happens. */

{if (s->top == s->allocated_top) return;
 ptrdiff_t qtty = s->top - s->bottom + 1;
 if (qtty < MINIMUM_SIZE) qtty = MINIMUM_SIZE;
 size_t new_size = qtty * sizeof(T);
 s->bottom = realloc(s->bottom, new_size);
 check_pointer(s->bottom);
 s->allocated_top = s->bottom + qtty - 1;}</lang>

C#

<lang csharp>// Non-Generic Stack System.Collections.Stack stack = new System.Collections.Stack(); stack.Push( obj ); bool isEmpty = stack.Count == 0; object top = stack.Peek(); // Peek without Popping. top = stack.Pop();

// Generic Stack System.Collections.Generic.Stack<Foo> stack = new System.Collections.Generic.Stack<Foo>(); stack.Push(new Foo()); bool isEmpty = stack.Count == 0; Foo top = stack.Peek(); // Peek without Popping. top = stack.Pop();</lang>

C++

Library: STL

The C++ standard library already provides a ready-made stack class. You get it by writing <lang cpp>#include <stack></lang> and then using the std::stack class.

An example of an explicit implementation of a stack class (which actually implements the standard stack class, except that the standard one is in namespace std): <lang cpp>#include <deque> template <class T, class Sequence = std::deque<T> > class stack {

 friend bool operator== (const stack&, const stack&);
 friend bool operator<  (const stack&, const stack&);

public:

 typedef typename Sequence::value_type      value_type;
 typedef typename Sequence::size_type       size_type;
 typedef          Sequence                  container_type;
 typedef typename Sequence::reference       reference;
 typedef typename Sequence::const_reference const_reference;

protected:

 Sequence seq;

public:

 stack() : seq() {}
 explicit stack(const Sequence& s0) : seq(s0) {}
 bool empty() const { return seq.empty(); }
 size_type size() const { return seq.size(); }
 reference top() { return seq.back(); }
 const_reference top() const { return seq.back(); }
 void push(const value_type& x) { seq.push_back(x); }
 void pop() { seq.pop_back(); }

};

template <class T, class Sequence> bool operator==(const stack<T,Sequence>& x, const stack<T,Sequence>& y) {

 return x.seq == y.seq;

} template <class T, class Sequence> bool operator<(const stack<T,Sequence>& x, const stack<T,Sequence>& y) {

 return x.seq < y.seq;

}

template <class T, class Sequence> bool operator!=(const stack<T,Sequence>& x, const stack<T,Sequence>& y) {

 return !(x == y);

} template <class T, class Sequence> bool operator>(const stack<T,Sequence>& x, const stack<T,Sequence>& y) {

 return y < x;

} template <class T, class Sequence> bool operator<=(const stack<T,Sequence>& x, const stack<T,Sequence>& y) {

 return !(y < x);

} template <class T, class Sequence> bool operator>=(const stack<T,Sequence>& x, const stack<T,Sequence>& y) {

 return !(x < y);

}</lang>

Clojure

As is mentioned in the Common Lisp example below, built in cons-based lists work just fine. In this implementation, the list is wrapped in a datatype, providing a stateful solution. <lang lisp>(deftype Stack [elements])

(def stack (Stack (ref ())))

(defn push-stack

 "Pushes an item to the top of the stack."
 [x] (dosync (alter (:elements stack) conj x)))

(defn pop-stack

 "Pops an item from the top of the stack."
 [] (let [fst (first (deref (:elements stack)))] 
      (dosync (alter (:elements stack) rest)) fst))

(defn top-stack

 "Shows what's on the top of the stack."
 [] (first (deref (:elements stack))))

(defn empty-stack?

 "Tests whether or not the stack is empty."
 [] (= () (deref (:elements stack))))</lang>

We can make this a bit smaller and general by using defprotocol along with deftype. Here is a revised version using defprotocol.

<lang lisp>(defprotocol StackOps

 (push-stack [this x] "Pushes an item to the top of the stack.")
 (pop-stack [this] "Pops an item from the top of the stack.")
 (top-stack [this] "Shows what's on the top of the stack.")
 (empty-stack? [this] "Tests whether or not the stack is empty."))

(deftype Stack [elements]

 StackOps
  (push-stack [x] (dosync (alter elements conj x)))
  (pop-stack [] (let [fst (first (deref elements))]

(dosync (alter elements rest)) fst))

  (top-stack [] (first (deref elements)))
  (empty-stack? [] (= () (deref elements))))

(def stack (Stack (ref ())))</lang>

COBOL

Works with: COBOL version 2002
Works with: OpenCOBOL version 1.1

Based loosely on the C stack implementation in Evangel Quiwa's Data Structures.

This example (ab)uses the COPY procedure to ensure that there is a consistently-defined stack type, node type, node information type, p(redicate) type, and set of stack-utilities.

stack.cbl <lang COBOL> 01 stack.

        05  head USAGE IS POINTER VALUE NULL.

</lang>

node.cbl <lang COBOL> 01 node BASED.

        COPY node-info REPLACING
          01 BY 05
          node-info BY info.
        05  link USAGE IS POINTER VALUE NULL.

</lang>

node-info.cbl <lang COBOL> 01 node-info PICTURE X(10) VALUE SPACES. </lang>

p.cbl <lang COBOL> 01 p PICTURE 9.

        88 nil VALUE ZERO WHEN SET TO FALSE IS 1.
        88 t   VALUE 1 WHEN SET TO FALSE IS ZERO.

</lang>

stack-utilities.cbl <lang COBOL> IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.

      PROGRAM-ID. push.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      COPY p.
      COPY node.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      01  node-info-any PICTURE X ANY LENGTH.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack node-info-any.
        ALLOCATE node
        CALL "pointerp" USING
          BY REFERENCE ADDRESS OF node
          BY REFERENCE p
        END-CALL
        IF nil
          CALL "stack-overflow-error" END-CALL
        ELSE
          MOVE node-info-any TO info OF node
          SET link OF node TO head OF stack
          SET head OF stack TO ADDRESS OF node
        END-IF
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM push.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. pop.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      COPY p.
      COPY node.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      COPY node-info.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack node-info.
        CALL "empty" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY REFERENCE p
        END-CALL
        IF t
          CALL "stack-underflow-error" END-CALL
        ELSE
          SET ADDRESS OF node TO head OF stack
          SET head OF stack TO link OF node
          MOVE info OF node TO node-info
        END-IF
        FREE ADDRESS OF node
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM pop.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. empty.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      COPY p.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack p.
        CALL "pointerp" USING
          BY CONTENT head OF stack
          BY REFERENCE p
        END-CALL
        IF t
          SET t TO FALSE
        ELSE
          SET t TO TRUE
        END-IF
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM empty.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. head.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      COPY p.
      COPY node.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      COPY node-info.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack node-info.
        CALL "empty" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY REFERENCE p
        END-CALL
        IF t
          CALL "stack-underflow-error" END-CALL
        ELSE
          SET ADDRESS OF node TO head OF stack
          MOVE info OF node TO node-info
        END-IF
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM head.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. peek.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      COPY node-info.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack node-info.
        CALL "head" USING
          BY CONTENT stack
          BY REFERENCE node-info
        END-CALL
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM peek.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. pointerp.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      01  test-pointer USAGE IS POINTER.
      COPY p.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING test-pointer p.
        IF test-pointer EQUAL NULL
          SET nil TO TRUE
        ELSE
          SET t TO TRUE
        END-IF
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM pointerp.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. stack-overflow-error.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION.
        DISPLAY "stack-overflow-error" END-DISPLAY
        STOP RUN.
      END PROGRAM stack-overflow-error.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. stack-underflow-error.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION.
        DISPLAY "stack-underflow-error" END-DISPLAY
        STOP RUN.
      END PROGRAM stack-underflow-error.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. copy-stack.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      COPY p.
      COPY node-info.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      COPY stack REPLACING stack BY new-stack.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack new-stack.
        CALL "empty" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY REFERENCE p
        END-CALL
        IF nil
          CALL "pop" USING
            BY REFERENCE stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
          CALL "copy-stack" USING
            BY REFERENCE stack
            BY REFERENCE new-stack
          END-CALL
          CALL "push" USING
            BY REFERENCE stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
          CALL "push" USING
            BY REFERENCE new-stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
        END-IF
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM copy-stack.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. reverse-stack.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      COPY p.
      COPY node-info.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      COPY stack REPLACING stack BY new-stack.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack new-stack.
        CALL "empty" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY REFERENCE p
        END-CALL
        IF nil
          CALL "pop" USING
            BY REFERENCE stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
          CALL "push" USING
            BY REFERENCE new-stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
          CALL "reverse-stack" USING
            BY REFERENCE stack
            BY REFERENCE new-stack
          END-CALL
          CALL "push" USING
            BY REFERENCE stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
        END-IF
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM reverse-stack.
      IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
      PROGRAM-ID. traverse-stack.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      COPY p.
      COPY node-info.
      COPY stack REPLACING stack BY new-stack.
      LINKAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION USING stack.
        CALL "copy-stack" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY REFERENCE new-stack
        END-CALL
        CALL "empty" USING
          BY REFERENCE new-stack
          BY REFERENCE p
        END-CALL
        IF nil
          CALL "head" USING
            BY CONTENT new-stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
          DISPLAY node-info END-DISPLAY
          CALL "peek" USING
            BY CONTENT new-stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
          DISPLAY node-info END-DISPLAY
          CALL "pop" USING
            BY REFERENCE new-stack
            BY REFERENCE node-info
          END-CALL
          DISPLAY node-info END-DISPLAY
          CALL "traverse-stack" USING
            BY REFERENCE new-stack
          END-CALL
        END-IF
        GOBACK.
      END PROGRAM traverse-stack.

</lang>

stack-test.cbl <lang COBOL> IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.

      PROGRAM-ID. stack-test.
      DATA DIVISION.
      LOCAL-STORAGE SECTION.
      COPY stack.
      COPY stack REPLACING stack BY new-stack.
      PROCEDURE DIVISION.
        CALL "push" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY CONTENT "daleth"
        END-CALL
        CALL "push" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY CONTENT "gimel"
        END-CALL
        CALL "push" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY CONTENT "beth"
        END-CALL
        CALL "push" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY CONTENT "aleph"
        END-CALL
        CALL "traverse-stack" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
        END-CALL
        CALL "reverse-stack" USING
          BY REFERENCE stack
          BY REFERENCE new-stack
        END-CALL
        CALL "traverse-stack" USING
          BY REFERENCE new-stack
        END-CALL
        STOP RUN.
      END PROGRAM stack-test.
      COPY stack-utilities.

</lang>

Output:
aleph
aleph
beth
beth
beth
gimel
gimel
gimel
daleth
daleth
daleth
daleth
daleth
daleth
gimel
gimel
gimel
beth
beth
beth
aleph
aleph
aleph

CoffeeScript

<lang CoffeeScript>stack = [] stack.push 1 stack.push 2 console.log stack console.log stack.pop() console.log stack</lang>

Common Lisp

It's a bit unusual to write a wrapper for a stack in Common Lisp; built-in cons-based lists work just fine. Nonetheless, here's an implementation where the list is wrapped in a structure, providing a stateful solution. <lang lisp>(defstruct stack

 elements)

(defun stack-push (element stack)

 (push element (stack-elements stack)))

(defun stack-pop (stack)(deftype Stack [elements])

(defun stack-empty (stack)

 (endp (stack-elements stack)))

(defun stack-top (stack)

 (first (stack-elements stack)))

(defun stack-peek (stack)

 (stack-top stack))</lang>

Component Pascal

Works with BlackBox Component Builder <lang oberon2> MODULE Stacks; IMPORT StdLog;

TYPE (* some pointers to records *) Object* = POINTER TO ABSTRACT RECORD END;

Integer = POINTER TO RECORD (Object) i: INTEGER END;

Point = POINTER TO RECORD (Object) x,y: REAL END;

Node = POINTER TO LIMITED RECORD next- : Node; data-: ANYPTR; END;

(* Stack *) Stack* = POINTER TO RECORD top- : Node; END;

PROCEDURE (dn: Object) Show*, NEW, ABSTRACT;

PROCEDURE (i: Integer) Show*; BEGIN StdLog.String("Integer(");StdLog.Int(i.i);StdLog.String(");");StdLog.Ln END Show;

PROCEDURE (p: Point) Show*; BEGIN StdLog.String("Point(");StdLog.Real(p.x);StdLog.Char(','); StdLog.Real(p.y);StdLog.String(");");StdLog.Ln END Show;

PROCEDURE (s: Stack) Init, NEW; BEGIN s.top := NIL; END Init;

PROCEDURE (s: Stack) Push*(data: ANYPTR), NEW; VAR n: Node; BEGIN NEW(n);n.next := NIL;n.data := data; IF s.top = NIL THEN s.top := n ELSE n.next := s.top; s.top := n END END Push;

PROCEDURE (s: Stack) Pop*(): ANYPTR, NEW; VAR x: ANYPTR; BEGIN IF s.top # NIL THEN x := s.top.data; s.top := s.top.next ELSE x := NIL END; RETURN x END Pop;

PROCEDURE (s: Stack) Empty*(): BOOLEAN, NEW; BEGIN RETURN s.top = NIL END Empty;

PROCEDURE NewStack*(): Stack; VAR s: Stack; BEGIN NEW(s);s.Init; RETURN s END NewStack;

PROCEDURE NewInteger*(data: INTEGER): Integer; VAR i: Integer; BEGIN NEW(i);i.i := data; RETURN i END NewInteger;

PROCEDURE NewPoint*(x,y: REAL): Point; VAR p: Point; BEGIN NEW(p);p.x := x;p.y := y; RETURN p END NewPoint;

PROCEDURE TestStack*; VAR s: Stack; BEGIN s := NewStack(); s.Push(NewInteger(1)); s.Push(NewPoint(2.0,3.4)); s.Pop()(Object).Show(); s.Pop()(Object).Show(); END TestStack;

END Stacks. </lang>

Execute: ^Q Stacks.TestStack

Output:
Point( 2.0, 3.4);
Integer( 1);

D

Generic stack class implemented with a dynamic array. <lang d>import std.array;

class Stack(T) {

   private T[] items;
   @property bool empty() { return items.empty(); }
   void push(T top) { items ~= top; }
   T pop() {
       if (this.empty)
           throw new Exception("Empty Stack.");
       auto top = items.back;
       items.popBack();
       return top;
   }

}

void main() {

   auto s = new Stack!int();
   s.push(10);
   s.push(20);
   assert(s.pop() == 20);
   assert(s.pop() == 10);
   assert(s.empty());

}</lang>

Déjà Vu

<lang dejavu>local :stack [] #lists used to be stacks in DV

push-to stack 1 push-to stack 2 push-to stack 3

!. pop-from stack #prints 3 !. pop-from stack #prints 2 !. pop-from stack #prints 1

if stack: #empty lists are falsy

   error #this stack should be empty now!</lang>

Delphi

<lang Delphi>program Stack;

{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}

uses Generics.Collections;

var

 lStack: TStack<Integer>;

begin

 lStack := TStack<Integer>.Create;
 try
   lStack.Push(1);
   lStack.Push(2);
   lStack.Push(3);
   Assert(lStack.Peek = 3); // 3 should be at the top of the stack
   Writeln(lStack.Pop); // 3
   Writeln(lStack.Pop); // 2
   Writeln(lStack.Pop); // 1
   Assert(lStack.Count = 0); // should be empty
 finally
   lStack.Free;
 end;

end.</lang>

DWScript

Dynamic arrays have pseudo-methods that allow to treat them as a stack. <lang Delphi> var stack: array of Integer;

stack.Push(1); stack.Push(2); stack.Push(3);

PrintLn(stack.Pop); // 3 PrintLn(stack.Pop); // 2 PrintLn(stack.Pop); // 1

Assert(stack.Length = 0); // assert empty </lang>

E

The standard FlexList data structure provides operations for use as a stack. <lang e>? def l := [].diverge()

  1. value: [].diverge()

? l.push(1) ? l.push(2) ? l

  1. value: [1, 2].diverge()

? l.pop()

  1. value: 2

? l.size().aboveZero()

  1. value: true

? l.last()

  1. value: 1

? l.pop()

  1. value: 1

? l.size().aboveZero()

  1. value: false</lang>

Here's a stack implemented out of a reference to a linked list: <lang e>def makeStack() {

   var store := null
   def stack {
       to push(x) { store := [x, store] }
       to pop() { def [x, next] := store; store := next; return x }
       to last() { return store[0] }
       to empty() { return (store == null) }
   }
   return stack

}

? def s := makeStack()

  1. value: <stack>

? s.push(1) ? s.push(2) ? s.last()

  1. value: 2

? s.pop()

  1. value: 2

? s.empty()

  1. value: false

? s.pop()

  1. value: 1

? s.empty()

  1. value: true</lang>

EchoLisp

Named stacks are native objects. The following demonstrates the available operations : <lang lisp>

build stack [0 1 ... 9 (top)] from a list

(list->stack (iota 10) 'my-stack) (stack-top 'my-stack) → 9 (pop 'my-stack) → 9 (stack-top 'my-stack) → 8 (push 'my-stack '🐸) ; any kind of lisp object in the stack (stack-empty? 'my-stack) → #f (stack->list 'my-stack) ; convert stack to list

   → (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 🐸)

(stack-swap 'my-stack) ; swaps two last items

   → 8 ; new top

(stack->list 'my-stack)

    → (0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 🐸 8) ; swapped

(while (not (stack-empty? 'my-stack)) (pop 'my-stack)) ; pop until empty (stack-empty? 'my-stack) → #t ; true

(push 'my-stack 7) my-stack ; a stack is not a variable, nor a symbol - cannot be evaluated

  ⛔ error: #|user| : unbound variable : my-stack

(stack-top 'my-stack) → 7 </lang>

Eiffel

<lang Eiffel> class STACK_ON_ARRAY

create make

feature -- Implementation

empty: BOOLEAN do Result := stack.is_empty ensure empty: Result = (stack.count = 0) end

push (item: ANY) do stack.force (item, stack.count) ensure pushed: stack [stack.upper] = item growth: stack.count = old stack.count + 1 end

pop: ANY require not_empty: not empty do Result := stack.at (stack.upper) stack.remove_tail (1) ensure reduction: stack.count = old stack.count - 1 end

feature {NONE} -- Initialization

stack: ARRAY [ANY]

make do create stack.make_empty end

end </lang>

Elena

<lang elena>

   #var stack := system'collections'Stack new.
   
   stack push:2.
   
   #var isEmpty := stack length == 0.
   
   #var item := stack peek. // Peek without Popping.
   
   item := stack pop.

</lang>

Elisa

This is a generic Stack component based on arrays. See how in Elisa generic components are defined. <lang Elisa> component GenericStack ( Stack, Element );

type Stack;
     Stack (MaxSize = integer) -> Stack;
     Empty ( Stack )           -> boolean;
     Full ( Stack )            -> boolean;
     Push ( Stack, Element)    -> nothing;
     Pull ( Stack )            -> Element;

begin

     Stack(MaxSize) =
            Stack:[ MaxSize; index:=0; area=array (Element, MaxSize) ];
     Empty( stack ) = (stack.index <= 0);
     Full ( stack ) = (stack.index >= stack.MaxSize);
     Push ( stack, element ) = 
                  [ exception (Full (stack), "Stack Overflow");
                    stack.index:=stack.index + 1; 
                    stack.area[stack.index]:=element ];
     Pull ( stack ) = 
                  [ exception (Empty (stack), "Stack Underflow");
                    stack.index:=stack.index - 1; 
                    stack.area[stack.index + 1] ];

end component GenericStack;</lang> Another example of a generic Stack component is based on an unlimited sequence. A sequence is a uni-directional list. See how Elisa defines sequences. The component has the same interface as the array based version. <lang Elisa>component GenericStack ( Stack, ElementType );

type Stack;
     Stack(MaxSize = integer)  -> Stack;
     Empty( Stack )            -> boolean;
     Full ( Stack )            -> boolean;
     Push ( Stack, ElementType)-> nothing;
     Pull ( Stack )            -> ElementType;

begin

     type sequence = term;
     ElementType & sequence => sequence;
     nil = null (sequence);
     head (sequence) -> ElementType;
     head (X & Y) = ElementType:X;
     tail (sequence) -> sequence;
     tail (X & Y) = Y;
     Stack (Size) = Stack:[ list = nil ];
     Empty ( stack ) = (stack.list == nil);
     Full ( stack ) = false;
     Push ( stack, ElementType ) = [ stack.list:= ElementType & stack.list ];
     Pull ( stack ) = [ exception (Empty (stack), "Stack Underflow");
                        Head = head(stack.list); stack.list:=tail(stack.list); Head];

end component GenericStack;</lang> Both versions give the same answers to the following tests: <lang Elisa>use GenericStack (StackofBooks, Book); type Book = text; BookStack = StackofBooks(50);

Push (BookStack, "Peter Pan"); Push (BookStack, "Alice in Wonderland");

Pull (BookStack)? "Alice in Wonderland"

Pull (BookStack)? "Peter Pan"

Pull (BookStack)?

          • Exception: Stack Underflow</lang>

Elixir

Translation of: Erlang

<lang elixir>defmodule Stack do

 def new, do: []
 
 def empty?([]), do: true
 def empty?(_), do: false
 
 def pop([h|t]), do: {h,t}
 
 def push(h,t), do: [h|t]
 
 def top([h|_]), do: h

end</lang>

Example:

iex(2)> stack = Stack.new
[]
iex(3)> Stack.empty?(stack)
true
iex(4)> newstack = List.foldl([1,2,3,4,5], stack, fn x,acc -> Stack.push(x,acc) end)
[5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
iex(5)> Stack.top(newstack)
5
iex(6)> {popped, poppedstack} = Stack.pop(newstack)
{5, [4, 3, 2, 1]}
iex(7)> Stack.empty?(newstack)
false

Erlang

Erlang has no built-in stack, but its lists behave basically the same way. A stack module can be implemented as a simple wrapper around lists: <lang erlang>-module(stack). -export([empty/1, new/0, pop/1, push/2, top/1]).

new() -> [].

empty([]) -> true; empty(_) -> false.

pop([H|T]) -> {H,T}.

push(H,T) -> [H|T].

top([H|_]) -> H.</lang> Note that as Erlang doesn't have mutable data structure (destructive updates), pop returns the popped element and the new stack as a tuple.

The module is tested this way: <lang erlang>1> c(stack). {ok,stack} 2> Stack = stack:new(). [] 3> NewStack = lists:foldl(fun stack:push/2, Stack, [1,2,3,4,5]). [5,4,3,2,1] 4> stack:top(NewStack). 5 5> {Popped, PoppedStack} = stack:pop(NewStack). {5,[4,3,2,1]} 6> stack:empty(NewStack). false 7> stack:empty(stack:new()). true</lang>

F#

.NET provides a mutable stack type in System.Collections.Generic.Stack.

A list-based immutable stack type could be implemented like this: <lang fsharp>type Stack<'a> //'//(workaround for syntax highlighting problem)

 (?items) =
 let items = defaultArg items []
 member x.Push(A) = Stack(A::items)
 member x.Pop() =
   match items with
     | x::xr ->  (x, Stack(xr))
     | [] -> failwith "Stack is empty."
 member x.IsEmpty() = items = []

// example usage let anEmptyStack = Stack<int>() let stack2 = anEmptyStack.Push(42) printfn "%A" (stack2.IsEmpty()) let (x, stack3) = stack2.Pop() printfn "%d" x printfn "%A" (stack3.IsEmpty())</lang>

Factor

Factor is a stack based language, but also provides stack "objects", because all resizable sequences can be treated as stacks (see docs). Typically, a vector is used: <lang factor> V{ 1 2 3 } {

[ 6 swap push ]
[ "hi" swap push ]
[ "Vector is now: " write . ]
[ "Let's pop it: " write pop . ]
[ "Vector is now: " write . ]
[ "Top is: " write last . ] } cleave
Vector is now: V{ 1 2 3 6 "hi" }
Let's pop it: "hi"
Vector is now: V{ 1 2 3 6 }
Top is: 6</lang>

Forth

<lang forth>: stack ( size -- )

 create here cell+ ,  cells allot ;
push ( n st -- ) tuck @ ! cell swap +! ;
pop ( st -- n ) -cell over +! @ @ ;
empty? ( st -- ? ) dup @ - cell+ 0= ;

10 stack st

1 st push 2 st push 3 st push st empty? . \ 0 (false) st pop . st pop . st pop . \ 3 2 1 st empty? . \ -1 (true)</lang>

Fortran

This solution can easily be adapted to data types other than integer. <lang fortran>module stack

 public
 ! Define the data-structure to hold the data
 type stack_var
    integer, allocatable :: data(:)
    integer              :: size = 0
 end type stack_var
 ! Set the size of allocated memory blocks
 integer, parameter, private :: block_size = 10

contains

 ! Push ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 subroutine push(s, e)
   type(stack_var), intent(inout) :: s
   integer, intent(in)            :: e
   integer, allocatable :: wk(:)
   if (.not. allocated(s%data)) then
      ! Allocate space if not yet done
      allocate(s%data(block_size))
   elseif (s%size == size(s%data)) then
      ! Grow the allocated space
      allocate(wk(size(s%data)+block_size))
      wk(1:s%size) = s%data
      call move_alloc(wk,s%data)
   end if
   ! Store the data in the stack
   s%size = s%size + 1
   s%data(s%size) = e
 end subroutine push
 ! Pop -----------------------------------------------------------------------
 function pop(s)
   integer :: pop
   type(stack_var), intent(inout) :: s
   if (s%size == 0 .or. .not. allocated(s%data)) then
      pop = 0
      return
   end if
   pop = s%data(s%size)
   s%size = s%size - 1
 end function pop
 ! Peek ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 integer function peek(s)
   type(stack_var), intent(inout) :: s
   if (s%size == 0 .or. .not. allocated(s%data)) then
      peek = 0
      return
   end if
   peek = s%data(s%size)
 end function peek
 ! Empty ---------------------------------------------------------------------
 logical function empty(s)
   type(stack_var), intent(inout) :: s
   empty = (s%size == 0 .or. .not. allocated(s%data))
 end function empty

end module stack

program tstack

 use stack
 implicit none
 type(stack_var) :: s
 integer         :: v
 call push(s,1)
 call push(s,2)
 call push(s,3)
 call push(s,4)
 do
    if (empty(s)) exit
    v = pop(s)
    write(*,'(a,i0)') 'Popped value off stack = ',v
 end do

end program tstack</lang>

Go

Go slices make excellent stacks without defining any extra types, functions, or methods. For example, to keep a stack of integers, simply declare one as, <lang go>var intStack []int</lang> Use the built in append function to push numbers on the stack: <lang go>intStack = append(intStack, 7)</lang> Use a slice expression with the built in len function to pop from the stack: <lang go>popped, intStack = intStack[len(intStack)-1], intStack[:len(intStack)-1]</lang> The test for an empty stack: <lang go>len(intStack) == 0</lang> And to peek at the top of the stack: <lang go>intStack[len(intStack)-1]</lang> It is idiomatic Go to use primitive language features where they are sufficient, and define helper functions or types and methods only as they make sense for a particular situation. Below is an example using a type with methods and idiomatic "ok" return values to avoid panics. It is only an example of something that might make sense in some situation. <lang go>package main

import "fmt"

type stack []interface{}

func (k *stack) push(s interface{}) {

   *k = append(*k, s)

}

func (k *stack) pop() (s interface{}, ok bool) {

   if k.empty() {
       return
   }
   last := len(*k) - 1
   s = (*k)[last]
   *k = (*k)[:last]
   return s, true

}

func (k *stack) peek() (s interface{}, ok bool) {

   if k.empty() {
       return
   }
   last := len(*k) - 1
   s = (*k)[last]
   return s, true

}

func (k *stack) empty() bool {

   return len(*k) == 0

}

func main() {

   var s stack
   fmt.Println("new stack:", s)
   fmt.Println("empty?", s.empty())
   s.push(3)
   fmt.Println("push 3. stack:", s)
   fmt.Println("empty?", s.empty())
   s.push("four")
   fmt.Println(`push "four" stack:`, s)
   if top, ok := s.peek(); ok {
       fmt.Println("top value:", top)
   } else {
       fmt.Println("nothing on stack")
   }
   if popped, ok := s.pop(); ok {
       fmt.Println(popped, "popped.  stack:", s)
   } else {
       fmt.Println("nothing to pop")
   }

}</lang>

Output:
new stack: []
empty? true
push 3. stack: [3]
empty? false
push "four" stack: [3 four]
top value: four
four popped.  stack: [3]

Groovy

In Groovy, all lists have stack semantics, including "push()" and "pop()" methods, an "empty" property, and a "last()" method as a stand-in for "top/peek" semantics. Calling "pop()" on an empty list throws an exception.

Of course, these stack semantics are not exclusive. Elements of the list can still be accessed and manipulated in myriads of other ways. <lang groovy>def stack = [] assert stack.empty

stack.push(55) stack.push(21) stack.push('kittens') assert stack.last() == 'kittens' assert stack.size() == 3 assert ! stack.empty

println stack

assert stack.pop() == "kittens" assert stack.size() == 2

println stack

stack.push(-20)

println stack

stack.push( stack.pop() * stack.pop() ) assert stack.last() == -420 assert stack.size() == 2

println stack

stack.push(stack.pop() / stack.pop()) assert stack.size() == 1

println stack

println stack.pop() assert stack.size() == 0 assert stack.empty

try { stack.pop() } catch (NoSuchElementException e) { println e.message }</lang>

Output:
[55, 21, kittens]
[55, 21]
[55, 21, -20]
[55, -420]
[-7.6363636364]
-7.6363636364
Cannot pop() an empty List

Haskell

The Haskell solution is trivial, using a list. Note that pop returns both the element and the changed stack, to remain purely functional. <lang haskell>type Stack a = [a]

create :: Stack a create = []

push :: a -> Stack a -> Stack a push = (:)

pop :: Stack a -> (a, Stack a) pop [] = error "Stack empty" pop (x:xs) = (x,xs)

empty :: Stack a -> Bool empty = null

peek :: Stack a -> a peek [] = error "Stack empty" peek (x:_) = x</lang> We can make a stack that can be destructively popped by hiding the list inside a State monad. <lang haskell>import Control.Monad.State

type Stack a b = State [a] b

push :: a -> Stack a () push = modify . (:)

pop :: Stack a a pop = do

   nonEmpty
   x <- peek
   modify tail
   return x

empty :: Stack a Bool empty = gets null

peek :: Stack a a peek = nonEmpty >> gets head

nonEmpty :: Stack a () nonEmpty = empty >>= flip when (fail "Stack empty")</lang>

Icon and Unicon

Stacks (and double ended queues) are built into Icon and Unicon as part of normal list access. In addition to 'push' and 'pop', there are the functions 'put', 'get' (alias for pop), 'pull', list element addressing, and list sectioning (like sub-strings). Unicon extended 'insert' and 'delete' to work with lists. The programmer is free to use any or all of the list processing functions on any problem. The following illustrates typical stack usage: <lang Icon>procedure main() stack := [] # new empty stack push(stack,1) # add item push(stack,"hello",table(),set(),[],5) # add more items of mixed types in order left to right y := top(stack) # peek x := pop(stack) # remove item write("The stack is ",if isempty(stack) then "empty" else "not empty") end

procedure isempty(x) #: test if a datum is empty, return the datum or fail (task requirement) if *x = 0 then return x # in practice just write *x = 0 or *x ~= 0 for is/isn't empty end

procedure top(x) #: return top element w/o changing stack return x[1] # in practice, just use x[1] end</lang>

Io

aside from using built-in lists, a stack can be created using nodes like so: <lang io>Node := Object clone do(

   next := nil
   obj := nil

)

Stack := Object clone do(

   node := nil
   
   pop := method(
       obj := node obj
       node = node next
       obj
   )
   
   push := method(obj,
       nn := Node clone
       nn obj = obj
       nn next = self node
       self node = nn
   )

)</lang>

Ioke

<lang ioke>Stack = Origin mimic do(

 initialize = method(@elements = [])
 pop = method(@elements pop!)
 empty = method(@elements empty?)
 push = method(element, @elements push!(element))

)</lang>

J

<lang J>stack=: push=: monad def '0$stack=:stack,y' pop=: monad def 'r[ stack=:}:stack[ r=.{:stack' empty=: monad def '0=#stack'</lang> Example use: <lang J> push 9

  pop 

9

  empty 

1</lang> pop and empty ignore their arguments. In this implementation. push returns an empty list.

Java

The collections framework includes a Stack class. Let's test it: <lang Java>import java.util.Stack;

public class StackTest {

   public static void main( final String[] args ) {
       final Stack<String> stack = new Stack<String>();
       System.out.println( "New stack empty? " + stack.empty() );
       stack.push( "There can be only one" );
       System.out.println( "Pushed stack empty? " + stack.empty() );
       System.out.println( "Popped single entry: " + stack.pop() );
       stack.push( "First" );
       stack.push( "Second" );
       System.out.println( "Popped entry should be second: " + stack.pop() );
       // Popping an empty stack will throw...
       stack.pop();
       stack.pop();
   }

}</lang>

Output:
New stack empty? true
Pushed stack empty? false
Popped single entry: There can be only one
Popped entry should be second: Second
Exception in thread "main" java.util.EmptyStackException
	at java.util.Stack.peek(Stack.java:85)
	at java.util.Stack.pop(Stack.java:67)
	at StackTest.main(StackTest.java:21)

Alternatively, you might implement a stack yourself... <lang java>public class Stack{

   private Node first = null;
   public boolean isEmpty(){
       return first == null;
   }
   public Object Pop(){
       if(isEmpty()) 
           throw new Exception("Can't Pop from an empty Stack.");
       else{
           Object temp = first.value;
           first = first.next;
           return temp;
       }
   }
   public void Push(Object o){
       first = new Node(o, first);
   }
   class Node{
       public Node next;
       public Object value;
       public Node(Object value){
           this(value, null); 
       }
       public Node(Object value, Node next){
           this.next = next;
           this.value = value;
       }
   }

}</lang>

Works with: Java version 1.5

<lang java5>public class Stack<T>{

   private Node first = null;
   public boolean isEmpty(){
       return first == null;
   }
   public T Pop(){
       if(isEmpty()) 
           throw new Exception("Can't Pop from an empty Stack.");
       else{
           T temp = first.value;
           first = first.next;
           return temp;
       }
   }
   public void Push(T o){
       first = new Node(o, first);
   }
   class Node{
       public Node next;
       public T value;
       public Node(T value){
           this(value, null); 
       }
       public Node(T value, Node next){
           this.next = next;
           this.value = value;
       }
   }

}</lang>

JavaScript

The built-in Array class already has stack primitives. <lang javascript>var stack = []; stack.push(1) stack.push(2,3); print(stack.pop()); // 3 print(stack.length); // 2, stack empty if 0</lang> Here's a constructor that wraps the array: <lang javascript>function Stack() {

   this.data = new Array();
   this.push  = function(element) {this.data.push(element)}
   this.pop   = function() {return this.data.pop()}
   this.empty = function() {return this.data.length == 0}
   this.peek  = function() {return this.data[this.data.length - 1]}

}</lang> Here's an example using the revealing module pattern instead of prototypes. <lang javascript> function makeStack() {

 var stack = [];
 var popStack = function () {
   return stack.pop();
 };
 var pushStack = function () {
   return stack.push.apply(stack, arguments);
 };
 var isEmpty = function () {
   return stack.length === 0;
 };
 var peekStack = function () {
   return stack[stack.length-1];
 };
   
 return {
   pop: popStack,
   push: pushStack,
   isEmpty: isEmpty,
   peek: peekStack,
   top: peekStack
 };

} </lang>

Julia

The built-in Array class already has efficient (linear amortized time) stack primitives. <lang julia>stack = {} push!(stack, 1) push!(stack, 2) push!(stack, 3) println(pop!(stack)) # 3 println(length(stack)) # 2 empty!(stack) println(length(stack)) # 0</lang>

K

<lang K>stack:() push:{stack::x,stack} pop:{r:*stack;stack::1_ stack;r} empty:{0=#stack}

/example: stack:()

 push 3
 stack

,3

 push 5
 stack

5 3

 pop[]

5

 stack

,3

 empty[]

0

 pop[]

3

 stack

!0

 empty[]

1 </lang>

lang5

<lang lang5>: cr "\n" . ;

empty? dup execute length if 0 else -1 then swap drop ;
pop dup execute length 1 - extract swap drop ;
push dup execute rot append over ;
s. stack execute . ;

[] '_ set

stack '_ ;

stack # local variable

   1 swap push set
   2 swap push set s. cr # [    1     2  ]
   pop .           s. cr # 2     [    1  ]
   pop drop
   empty? .              # -1</lang>

Lasso

Lasso Arrays natively supports push and pop.

<lang Lasso>local(a) = array

  1. a->push('a')
  2. a->push('b')
  3. a->push('c')
  1. a->pop // c
  2. a->pop // b
  3. a->pop // a
  4. a->pop // null</lang>

Liberty BASIC

<lang lb> global stack$ stack$=""

randomize .51 for i = 1 to 10

   if rnd(1)>0.5 then
       print  "pop => ";pop$()
   else
       j=j+1
       s$ = chr$(j + 64)
       print "push ";s$
       call push s$
   end if

next

print print "Clean-up" do

   print  "pop => ";pop$()

loop while not(empty()) print "Stack is empty"

end

'------------------------------------ sub push s$

   stack$=s$+"|"+stack$    'stack

end sub

function pop$()

   if stack$="" then pop$="*EMPTY*": exit function
   pop$=word$(stack$,1,"|")
   stack$=mid$(stack$,instr(stack$,"|")+1)

end function

function empty()

    empty =(stack$="")

end function </lang>

UCB Logo has built-in methods for treating lists as stacks. Since they are destructive, they take the name of the stack rather than the list itself. <lang logo>make "stack [] push "stack 1 push "stack 2 push "stack 3 print pop "stack  ; 3 print empty? :stack ; false</lang>

Logtalk

A stack can be trivially represented using the built-in representation for lists: <lang logtalk>

- object(stack).
   :- public(push/3).
   push(Element, Stack, [Element| Stack]).
   :- public(pop/3).
   pop([Top| Stack], Top, Stack).
   :- public(empty/1)
   empty([]).
- end_object.

</lang>

Lua

Tables have stack primitives by default: <lang lua>stack = {} table.insert(stack,3) print(table.remove(stack)) --> 3</lang>


Maple

<lang Maple>with(stack): # load the package, to allow use of short command names

s := stack:-new(a, b):

push(c, s):

  1. The following statements terminate with a semicolon and print output.

top(s); pop(s); pop(s); empty(s); pop(s); empty(s);</lang>

Output:
                                      c

                                      c

                                      b

                                    false

                                      a

                                    true

Mathematica

<lang Mathematica>EmptyQ[a_] := If[Length[a] == 0, True, False] SetAttributes[Push, HoldAll];[a_, elem_] := AppendTo[a, elem] SetAttributes[Pop, HoldAllComplete]; Pop[a_] := If[EmptyQ[a], False, b = Last[a]; Set[a, Most[a]]; b] Peek[a_] := If[EmptyQ[a], False, Last[a]]

Example use: stack = {};Push[stack, 1]; Push[stack, 2]; Push[stack, 3]; Push[stack, 4]; Peek[stack] ->4 Pop[stack] ->4 Peek[stack] ->3</lang>

MATLAB / Octave

Here is a simple implementation of a stack, that works in Matlab and Octave. It is closely related to the queue/fifo example. <lang matlab>mystack = {};

% push mystack{end+1} = x;

%pop x = mystack{end}; mystack{end} = [];

%peek,top x = mystack{end};

% empty isempty(mystack)</lang> Below is another solution, that encapsulates the fifo within the object-orientated "class" elements supported by Matlab. The given implementation is exactly the same as the MATLAB FIFO example, except that the "push()" function is modified to add stuff to the end of the queue instead of the beginning. This is a naive implementation, for rigorous applications this should be modified to initialize the LIFO to a buffered size, so that the "pop()" and "push()" functions don't resize the cell array that stores the LIFO's elements, every time they are called.

To use this implementation you must save this code in a MATLAB script file named "LIFOQueue.m" which must be saved in a folder named @LIFOQueue in your MATLAB directory. <lang MATLAB>%This class impliments a standard LIFO queue. classdef LIFOQueue

   properties  
       queue
   end
   
   methods
        
       %Class constructor
       function theQueue = LIFOQueue(varargin)
           
           if isempty(varargin) %No input arguments
               
               %Initialize the queue state as empty
               theQueue.queue = {};
           elseif (numel(varargin) > 1) %More than 1 input arg
               
               %Make the queue the list of input args
               theQueue.queue = varargin;
           elseif iscell(varargin{:}) %If the only input is a cell array
               
               %Make the contents of the cell array the elements in the queue 
               theQueue.queue = varargin{:};
           else %There is one input argument that is not a cell
               
               %Make that one arg the only element in the queue
               theQueue.queue = varargin;
           end
           
       end        
       
       %push() - pushes a new element to the end of the queue
       function push(theQueue,varargin)
           
           if isempty(varargin)
               theQueue.queue(end+1) = {[]};
           elseif (numel(varargin) > 1) %More than 1 input arg
               
               %Make the queue the list of input args
               theQueue.queue( end+1:end+numel(varargin) ) = varargin;
           elseif iscell(varargin{:}) %If the only input is a cell array
               
               %Make the contents of the cell array the elements in the queue 
               theQueue.queue( end+1:end+numel(varargin{:}) ) = varargin{:};
           else %There is one input argument that is not a cell
               
               %Make that one arg the only element in the queue
               theQueue.queue{end+1} = varargin{:};                
           end
           
           %Makes changes to the queue permanent
           assignin('caller',inputname(1),theQueue);  
           
       end
       
       %pop() - pops the first element off the queue
       function element = pop(theQueue)
          
           if empty(theQueue)
               error 'The queue is empty'
           else
               %Returns the first element in the queue
               element = theQueue.queue{end};
               
               %Removes the first element from the queue
               theQueue.queue(end) = [];
               
               %Makes changes to the queue permanent
               assignin('caller',inputname(1),theQueue);
           end
       end
       
       %empty() - Returns true if the queue is empty
       function trueFalse = empty(theQueue)
          
           trueFalse = isempty(theQueue.queue);
           
       end
       
   end %methods

end</lang> Sample Usage: <lang MATLAB>>> myLIFO = LIFOQueue(1,'fish',2,'fish','red fish','blue fish')

myLIFO =

LIFOQueue

>> myLIFO.pop()

ans =

blue fish

>> myLIFO.push('Cat Fish') >> myLIFO.pop()

ans =

Cat Fish

>> myLIFO.pop()

ans =

red fish

>> empty(myLIFO)

ans =

    0</lang>

Maxima

<lang maxima>/* lists can be used as stacks; Maxima provides pop and push */

load(basic)$

a: []$ push(25, a)$ push(7, a)$ pop(a);

emptyp(a); length(a);</lang>

Mercury

Efficient, generic stacks are provided as part of the standard library in Mercury. For sake of illustration, here is how a simple stack could be implemented.

<lang mercury>:- module sstack.

- interface.

% We're going to call the type sstack (simple stack) because we don't want to get it % accidentally confused with the official stack module in the standard library.

- type sstack(T).
- func sstack.new = sstack(T).
- pred sstack.is_empty(sstack(T)::in) is semidet.
- func sstack.push(sstack(T), T) = sstack(T).
- pred sstack.pop(T::out, sstack(T)::in, sstack(T)::out) is semidet.
- implementation.
- import_module list.
- type sstack(T)
  --->  sstack(list(T)).

sstack.new = sstack([]).

sstack.is_empty(sstack([])).

sstack.push(Stack0, Elem) = Stack1 :-

  Stack0 = sstack(Elems),
  Stack1 = sstack([Elem | Elems]).

sstack.pop(Elem, !Stack) :-

  !.Stack = sstack([Elem | Elems]),
  !:Stack = sstack(Elems).
- end_module sstack.</lang>

It should be noted that this is purely an illustrative example of a very simple stack. A real implementation would have predicate (:- pred) versions of the functions (:- func), for example, for consistency's sake with either the functions implemented in terms of the predicates or vice versa. The real library implementation also features more functionality including both semi-deterministic and deterministic versions of some functions/predicates as well as the ability to push a list of values in one operation.

Some of the implementation decisions above need an explanation. new/0 and push/2 were implemented as functions both for pedagogical reasons (a desire to show function syntax) and because they are a natural fit for functional thought: 0 or more inputs, one output, deterministic. is_empty/1 was implemented as a predicate because it's a single, simple succeed/fail test which is precisely what a predicate is in logic. pop/3 was implemented as a predicate because it has two outputs (the element and the new stack) and because it is semi-deterministic (it will fail if the stack is empty).

Note also that while pop/3 has three parameters, the function implementation looks like it has two. This is because the !Stack "parameter" is actually a pair of parameters using Mercury's state variable notation. !Stack is, in effect, two variables: !.Stack and !:Stack, input and output respectively. Using state variable notation here is a bit of overkill but again was brought in for pedagogical reasons to show the syntax.

Nemerle

Mutable stacks are available in System.Collections, System.Collections.Generic and Nemerle.Collections depending on what functionality beyond the basics you want. An immutable stack could be implemented fairly easily, as, for example, this quick and dirty list based implementation. <lang Nemerle>public class Stack[T] {

   private stack : list[T];
   
   public this()
   {
       stack = [];
   }
   
   public this(init : list[T])
   {
       stack = init;
   }
   
   public Push(item : T) : Stack[T]
   {
       Stack(item::stack)
   }
   
   public Pop() : T * Stack[T]
   {
       (stack.Head, Stack(stack.Tail))
   }
   
   public Peek() : T
   {
       stack.Head
   }
   
   public IsEmpty() : bool
   {
       stack.Length == 0
   }

}</lang>

NetRexx

<lang netrexx>/* NetRexx ************************************************************

  • 13.08.2013 Walter Pachl translated from REXX version 2
                                                                                                                                            • /

options replace format comments java crossref savelog symbols nobinary

stk = create_stk

say push(stk,123) 'from push' say empty(stk) say peek(stk) 'from peek' say pull(stk) 'from pull' say empty(stk) Say pull(stk) 'from pull'

method create_stk static returns Rexx

 stk = 
 stk[0] = 0
 return stk

method push(stk,v) static

 stk[0]=stk[0]+1
 stk[stk[0]]=v
 Return v

method peek(stk) static

 x=stk[0]
 If x=0 Then
   Return 'stk is empty'
 Else
   Return stk[x]

method pull(stk) static

 x=stk[0]
 If x=0 Then
   Return 'stk is empty'
 Else Do
   stk[0]=stk[0]-1
   Return stk[x]
   End

method empty(stk) static

 Return stk[0]=0</lang>
Output:
123 from push
0
123 from peek
123 from pull
1
stk is empty from pull

Nim

<lang nim> import math

type

 EStackEmpty = object of E_Base
 TStack* [A] = object 
   data: seq[A]
   count: int

proc initStack*[A](initialSize = 32): TStack[A] =

 assert isPowerOfTwo(initialSize)
 result.count = 0
 newSeq(result.data,initialSize)

proc cap*[A] (s: TStack[A]): int =

 result = s.data.len

proc len*[A](stack: TStack[A]): int =

 result = stack.count

proc push*[A](s: var TStack[A], item: A) =

 if s.count == s.data.len: 
   # not enough room, make container bigger
   var d: Seq[A]
   newSeq(d,s.len * 2)
   for i in 0 .. s.data.len - 1:
     shallowCopy(d[i],s.data[i])
   shallowCopy(s.data,d)
 s.data[s.count] = item
 inc(s.count)

proc pop*[A](s: var TStack[A]): A {.raises: [EStackEmpty].}=

 if s.count == 0:
   raise newException(EStackEmpty,"the stack is empty")
 dec(s.count)
 result = s.data[s.count]

proc top*[A](s: TStack[A]): A =

 result = s.data[s.count - 1]

proc isEmpty*[A](s: var TStack[A]): bool =

 return s.count == 0
  1. Tests

when isMainModule:

 var stk: TStack[char] = initStack[char](4)
 stk.push('a')
 stk.push('b')
 stk.push('c')
 stk.push('d')
 
 assert(stk.count == 4)
 assert(stk.data.len == 4)
 stk.push('e')
 assert(stk.cap == 8)
 assert(stk.top == 'e')


 discard stk.pop
 discard stk.pop
 discard stk.pop
 discard stk.pop
 assert(stk.isEmpty == false)
 discard stk.pop
 assert(stk.isEmpty == true)
 try:
   discard stk.pop
 except:
   let 
     e = getCurrentException()
     msg = getCurrentExceptionMsg()
   echo "Exception: ", repr(e), " msg: ", msg


</lang>

Oberon-2

Works with: oo2c version 2

<lang oberon2> MODULE Stacks; IMPORT

 Object,
 Object:Boxed,
 Out := NPCT:Console;

TYPE

 Pool(E: Object.Object) = POINTER TO ARRAY OF E;
 Stack*(E: Object.Object) = POINTER TO StackDesc(E);
 StackDesc*(E: Object.Object) = RECORD
   pool: Pool(E);
   cap-,top: LONGINT;
 END;
 PROCEDURE (s: Stack(E)) INIT*(cap: LONGINT);
 BEGIN
   NEW(s.pool,cap);s.cap := cap;s.top := -1
 END INIT;
 PROCEDURE (s: Stack(E)) Top*(): E;
 BEGIN
   RETURN s.pool[s.top]
 END Top;
 PROCEDURE (s: Stack(E)) Push*(e: E);
 BEGIN
   INC(s.top);
   ASSERT(s.top < s.cap);
   s.pool[s.top] := e;
 END Push;
 PROCEDURE (s: Stack(E)) Pop*(): E;
 VAR
   resp: E;
 BEGIN
   ASSERT(s.top >= 0);
   resp := s.pool[s.top];DEC(s.top);
   RETURN resp
 END Pop;
 PROCEDURE (s: Stack(E)) IsEmpty(): BOOLEAN;
 BEGIN
   RETURN s.top < 0
 END IsEmpty;
 PROCEDURE (s: Stack(E)) Size*(): LONGINT;
 BEGIN
   RETURN s.top + 1
 END Size;
 PROCEDURE Test;
 VAR
   s: Stack(Boxed.LongInt);
 BEGIN
   s := NEW(Stack(Boxed.LongInt),100);
   s.Push(NEW(Boxed.LongInt,10));
   s.Push(NEW(Boxed.LongInt,100));
   Out.String("size: ");Out.Int(s.Size(),0);Out.Ln;
   Out.String("pop: ");Out.Object(s.Pop());Out.Ln;
   Out.String("top: ");Out.Object(s.Top());Out.Ln;
   Out.String("size: ");Out.Int(s.Size(),0);Out.Ln
 END Test;

BEGIN

 Test

END Stacks. </lang>

Output:
size: 2
pop: 100
top: 10
size: 1

Objeck

Class library support for Stack/IntStack/FloatStack <lang objeck>stack := IntStack->New(); stack->Push(13); stack->Push(7); (stack->Pop() + stack->Pop())->PrintLine(); stack->IsEmpty()->PrintLine();</lang>

Objective-C

Using a NSMutableArray: <lang objc>NSMutableArray *stack = [NSMutableArray array]; // creating

[stack addObject:value]; // pushing

id value = [stack lastObject]; [stack removeLastObject]; // popping

[stack count] == 0 // is empty?</lang>

OCaml

Implemented as a singly-linked list, wrapped in an object: <lang ocaml>exception Stack_empty

class ['a] stack =

 object (self)
   val mutable lst : 'a list = []
   method push x =
    lst <- x::lst
   method pop =
     match lst with
       []    -> raise Stack_empty
     | x::xs -> lst <- xs;
                x
   method is_empty =
     lst = []
 end</lang>

Oforth

<lang Oforth>ListBuffer Class new: Stack Stack method: push { self add } Stack method: pop { self removeLast } Stack method: top { self last }</lang>

Usage : <lang Oforth>func: testStack { | s |

  Stack new ->s
  s push(10)
  s push(11)
  s push(12)
  s top println
  s pop println
  s pop println
  s pop println
  s isEmpty ifTrue: [ "Stack is empty" println ]

}</lang>

Output:
12
12
11
10
Stack is empty

ooRexx

The ooRexx queue class functions as a stack as well (it is a dequeue really). <lang ooRexx> stack = .queue~of(123, 234) -- creates a stack with a couple of items stack~push("Abc") -- pushing value = stack~pull -- popping value = stack~peek -- peeking -- the is empty test if stack~isEmpty then say "The stack is empty" </lang>

OxygenBasic

The real stack is freely available! <lang oxygenbasic> function f()

 sys a=1,b=2,c=3,d=4
 push a
 push b
 push c
 push d
 print a "," b "," c "," d 'result 1,2,3,4
 a=10
 b=20
 c=30
 d=40
 print a "," b "," c "," d 'result 10,20,30,40
 pop a
 pop b
 pop c
 pop d
 print a "," b "," c "," d 'result 4,3,2,1

end function

f </lang>

Oz

A thread-safe, list-based stack. Implemented as a module: <lang oz>functor export

  New
  Push
  Pop
  Empty

define

  fun {New}
     {NewCell nil}
  end
  proc {Push Stack Element}
     NewStack
     %% Use atomic swap for thread safety
     OldStack = Stack := NewStack
  in
     NewStack = Element|OldStack
  end
  proc {Pop Stack ?Result}
     NewStack
     %% Use atomic swap for thread safety
     OldStack = Stack := NewStack
  in
     Result|NewStack = OldStack
  end
  
  fun {Empty Stack}
     @Stack == nil
  end

end</lang> There is also a stack implementation in the standard library.

PARI/GP

<lang parigp>push(x)=v=concat(v,[x]);; pop()={

 if(#v,
   my(x=v[#v]);
   v=vecextract(v,1<<(#v-1)-1);
   x
 ,
   error("Stack underflow")
 )

}; empty()=v==[]; peek()={

 if(#v,
   v[#v]
 ,
   error("Stack underflow")
 )

};</lang>

Pascal

This implements stacks of integers in standard Pascal (should work on all existing Pascal dialects). <lang pascal>{ tStack is the actual stack type, tStackNode a helper type } type

 pStackNode = ^tStackNode;
 tStackNode = record
               next: pStackNode;
               data: integer;
              end;
 tStack = record
           top: pStackNode;
          end;

{ Always call InitStack before using a stack } procedure InitStack(var stack: tStack);

begin
 stack.top := nil
end;

{ This function removes all content from a stack; call before disposing, or before a local stack variable goes out of scope } procedure ClearStack(var stack: tStack);

var
 node: pStackNode;
begin
 while stack.top <> nil do
  begin
   node := stack.top;
   stack.top := stack.top^.next;
   dispose(node);
  end
end;

function StackIsEmpty(stack: tStack):Boolean;

begin
 StackIsEmpty := stack.top = nil
end;

procedure PushToStack(var stack: tStack; value: integer);

var
 node: pStackNode;
begin
 new(node);
 node^.next := stack.top;
 node^.data := value;
 stack.top := node
end;

{ may only be called on a non-empty stack! } function PopFromStack(var stack: tStack): integer;

var
 node: pStackNode;
begin
 node := stack.top;
 stack.top := node^.next;
 PopFromStack := node^.data;
 dispose(node);
end;</lang>

Perl

Perl comes prepared to treat its arrays as stacks, giving us the push and pop functions for free. To add empty, we basically give a new name to "not": <lang perl>sub empty{ not @_ }</lang>

Perl 6

Perl 6 still has the stack functions from Perl 5, but now they also can be accessed by object notation: <lang perl6>my @stack; # just a array @stack.push($elem); # add $elem to the end of @stack $elem = @stack.pop; # get the last element back @stack.elems == 0 # true, because the stack is empty not @stack # also true because @stack is false</lang>

PHP

PHP arrays behave like a stack: <lang php>$stack = array();

empty( $stack ); // true

array_push( $stack, 1 ); // or $stack[] = 1; array_push( $stack, 2 ); // or $stack[] = 2;

empty( $stack ); // false

echo array_pop( $stack ); // outputs "2" echo array_pop( $stack ); // outputs "1"</lang>

PicoLisp

The built-in functions push and pop are used to maintain a stack (of any type). <lang PicoLisp>(push 'Stack 3) (push 'Stack 2) (push 'Stack 1)</lang>

: Stack
-> (1 2 3)

: (pop 'Stack)
-> 1

: Stack
-> (2 3)

: (set 'Stack)  # empty
-> NIL

: Stack
-> NIL

PL/I

<lang PL/I>/* Any controlled variable may behave as a stack. */

declare s float controlled;

/* to push a value on the stack. */ allocate s; s = 10;

/* To pop a value from the stack. */ put (s); free s;

/* to peek at the top of stack> */ put (s);

/* To see whether the stack is empty */ if allocation(s) = 0 then ...

/* Note: popping a value from the stack, or peeking, */ /* would usually require a check that the stack is not empty. */

/* Note: The above is a simple stack for S. */ /* S can be any kind of data structure, an array, etc. */

/* Example to push ten values onto the stack, and then to */ /* remove them. */

/* Push ten values, obtained from the input, onto the stack: */ declare S float controlled; do i = 1 to 10;

  allocate s;
  get list (s);

end; /* To pop those values from the stack: */ do while (allocation(s) > 0);

  put skip list (s);
  free s;

end; /* The values are printed in the reverse order, of course. */</lang>

PostScript

Library: initlib

<lang postscript>% empty? is already defined. /push {exch cons}. /pop {uncons exch pop}. [2 3 4 5 6] 1 push = [1 2 3 4 5 6] [1 2 3 4 5 6] pop =[2 3 4 5 6] [2 3 4 5 6] empty? =false [] empty? =true</lang>

PowerShell

<lang PowerShell>

$stack = [System.Collections.Stack] @()

</lang>

Output:
PS C:\Scripts> 1, 2, 3 | ForEach-Object { $stack.Push($_) }

PS C:\Scripts> $stack
3
2
1

PS C:\Scripts> $stack.Pop()
3

PS C:\Scripts> $stack
2
1

PS C:\Scripts> $stack.Peek()
2

PS C:\Scripts> $stack
2
1

Prolog

Prolog is a particularly silly language to implement stack functions in, as the built-in lists can be treated as stacks in an ad hoc manner. Nonetheless, in the name of completeness: <lang prolog>% push( ELEMENT, STACK, NEW ) % True if NEW is [ELEMENT|STACK] push(ELEMENT,STACK,[ELEMENT|STACK]).

% pop( STACK, TOP, NEW ) % True if TOP and NEW are head and tail, respectively, of STACK pop([TOP|STACK],TOP,STACK).

% empty( STACK ) % True if STACK is empty empty([]).</lang>

PureBasic

For LIFO function PureBasic normally uses linked lists. Usage as described above could look like; <lang PureBasic>Global NewList MyStack()

Procedure Push_LIFO(n)

 FirstElement(MyStack())
 InsertElement(MyStack())
 MyStack() = n

EndProcedure

Procedure Pop_LIFO()

 If FirstElement(MyStack())
   Topmost = MyStack()
   DeleteElement(MyStack())
 EndIf
 ProcedureReturn Topmost

EndProcedure

Procedure Empty_LIFO()

 Protected Result
 If ListSize(MyStack())=0
   Result = #True
 EndIf
 ProcedureReturn Result

EndProcedure

Procedure Peek_LIFO()

 If FirstElement(MyStack())
   Topmost = MyStack()
 EndIf
 ProcedureReturn Topmost

EndProcedure

---- Example of implementation ----

Push_LIFO(3) Push_LIFO(1) Push_LIFO(4) While Not Empty_LIFO()

 Debug Pop_LIFO()

Wend</lang>

Output:
 4
 1
 3

Python

Works with: Python version 2.5

The faster and Pythonic way is using a deque (available from 2.4). A regular list is a little slower. <lang python>from collections import deque stack = deque() stack.append(value) # pushing value = stack.pop() not stack # is empty?</lang> If you need to expose your stack to the world, you may want to create a simpler wrapper: <lang python>from collections import deque

class Stack:

   def __init__(self):
       self._items = deque()
   def append(self, item):
       self._items.append(item)
   def pop(self):
       return self._items.pop()
   def __nonzero__(self):
       return bool(self._items)</lang>

Here is a stack implemented as linked list - with the same list interface. <lang python>class Stack:

   def __init__(self):
       self._first = None
   def __nonzero__(self):
       return self._first is not None 
   def append(self, value):
       self._first = (value, self._first)
   def pop(self):
       if self._first is None:
           raise IndexError, "pop from empty stack"
       value, self._first = self._first
       return value</lang>

Notes:

Using list interface - append, __nonzero__ make it easier to use, cleanup the client code, and allow changing the implementation later without affecting the client code. For example, instead of: <lang python>while not stack.empty():</lang> You can write: <lang python>while stack:</lang> Quick testing show that deque is about 5 times faster then the wrapper linked list implementations. This may be important if your stack is used in tight loops.

R

Library: proto

See FIFO for functional and object oriented implementations of a First-In-First-Out object, with similar code. <lang R>library(proto)

stack <- proto(expr = {

  l <- list()
  empty <- function(.) length(.$l) == 0
  push <- function(., x) 
  {
     .$l <- c(list(x), .$l)
     print(.$l)
     invisible()
  }
  pop <- function(.) 
  {
     if(.$empty()) stop("can't pop from an empty list")
     .$l1 <- NULL
     print(.$l)
     invisible()
  }

})

stack$empty()

  1. [1] TRUE

stack$push(3)

  1. 1
  2. [1] 3

stack$push("abc")

  1. 1
  2. [1] "abc"
  3. 2
  4. [1] 3

stack$push(matrix(1:6, nrow=2))

  1. 1
  2. [,1] [,2] [,3]
  3. [1,] 1 3 5
  4. [2,] 2 4 6
  5. 2
  6. [1] "abc"
  7. 3
  8. [1] 3

stack$empty()

  1. [1] FALSE

stack$pop()

  1. 1

[1] "abc"

  1. 2
  2. [1] 3

stack$pop()

  1. 1
  2. [1] 3

stack$pop()

  1. list()

stack$pop()

  1. Error in get("pop", env = stack, inherits = TRUE)(stack, ...) :
  2. can't pop from an empty list</lang>

Racket

Quick functional version:

<lang Racket>

  1. lang racket

(define (stack) '()) (define (push x stack) (cons x stack)) (define (pop stack) (values (car stack) (cdr stack))) (define (empty? stack) (null? stack)) </lang>

And a destructive object:

<lang Racket> (struct stack ([items #:auto]) #:mutable #:auto-value '()) (define (push! x stack)

 (set-stack-items! stack (cons x (stack-items stack))))

(define (pop! stack)

 (begin0 (car (stack-items stack))
   (set-stack-items! stack (cdr (stack-items stack)))))

(define (empty? stack)

 (null? (stack-items stack)))

</lang>

Raven

Use built in stack type: <lang raven>new stack as s 1 s push s pop</lang> Word empty is also built in: <lang raven>s empty if 'stack is empty' print</lang>

REBOL

<lang rebol>REBOL [ Title: "Stack" Author: oofoe Date: 2010-10-04 URL: http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Stack ]

stack: make object! [ data: copy []

push: func [x][append data x] pop: func [/local x][x: last data remove back tail data x] empty: does [empty? data]

peek: does [last data] ]

Teeny Tiny Test Suite

assert: func [code][print [either do code [" ok"]["FAIL"] mold code]]

print "Simple integers:" s: make stack [] s/push 1 s/push 2 ; Initialize.

assert [2 = s/peek] assert [2 = s/pop] assert [1 = s/pop] assert [s/empty]

print [lf "Symbolic data on stack:"] v: make stack [data: [this is a test]] ; Initialize on instance.

assert ['test = v/peek] assert ['test = v/pop] assert ['a = v/pop] assert [not v/empty]</lang> Sample run:

Simple integers:
  ok [2 = s/peek]
  ok [2 = s/pop]
  ok [1 = s/pop]
  ok [s/empty]

Symbolic data on stack:
  ok ['test = v/peek]
  ok ['test = v/pop]
  ok ['a = v/pop]
  ok [not v/empty]

Retro

<lang Retro>: stack ( n"- ) create 0 , allot ;

push ( na- ) dup ++ dup @ + ! ;
pop ( a-n ) dup @ over -- + @ ;
top ( a-n ) dup @ + @ ;
empty? ( a-f ) @ 0 = ;

10 stack st

1 st push 2 st push 3 st push st empty? putn st top putn st pop putn st pop putn st pop putn st empty? putn</lang>

REXX

version 1

<lang rexx>y=123 /*define a REXX variable, value is 123 */ push y /*pushes 123 onto the stack. */ pull g /*pops last value stacked & removes it. */ q=empty() /*invokes the EMPTY subroutine (below)*/ exit /*stick a fork in it, we're done. */

empty: return queued() /*subroutine returns # of stacked items.*/</lang>

version 2

<lang rexx>/* REXX ***************************************************************

  • supports push, pull, and peek
  • 11.08.2013 Walter Pachl
                                                                                                                                            • /

stk.=0 Call push 123 Say empty() say peek() say pull() Say empty() say peek() say push(456) say peek() Exit

push: Procedure Expose stk.

 Parse Arg v
 z=stk.0+1
 stk.z=v
 stk.0=z
 Return v

peek: Procedure Expose stk.

 If stk.0=0 Then
   Return 'stack is empty'
 Else Do
   z=stk.0
   Return stk.z
   End

pull: Procedure Expose stk.

 If stk.0=0 Then
   Return 'stack is empty'
 Else Do
   z=stk.0
   res=stk.z
   stk.0=stk.0-1
   Return res
   End

empty: Procedure Expose stk.

 Return stk.0=0</lang>
Output:
0
123
123
1
stack is empty
456
456

Ruby

Using an Array, there are already methods Array#push, Array#pop and Array#empty?. <lang ruby>stack = [] stack.push(value) # pushing value = stack.pop # popping stack.empty? # is empty?</lang> If you need to expose your stack to the world, you may want to create a simpler wrapper. Here is a wrapper class Stack that wraps Array but only exposes stack methods. <lang ruby>require 'forwardable'

  1. A stack contains elements in last-in, first-out order.
  2. Stack#push adds new elements to the top of the stack;
  3. Stack#pop removes elements from the top.

class Stack

 extend Forwardable
 
 # Creates a Stack containing _objects_.
 def self.[](*objects)
   new.push(*objects)
 end
 
 # Creates an empty Stack.
 def initialize
   @ary = []
 end
 
 # Duplicates a Stack.
 def initialize_copy(obj)
   super
   @ary = @ary.dup
 end
 
 # Adds each object to the top of this Stack. Returns self.
 def push(*objects)
   @ary.push(*objects)
   self
 end
 alias << push
 
 ##
 # :method: pop
 # :call-seq:
 #   pop -> obj or nil
 #   pop(n) -> ary
 #
 # Removes an element from the top of this Stack, and returns it.
 # Returns nil if the Stack is empty.
 #
 # If passing a number _n_, removes the top _n_ elements, and returns
 # an Array of them. If this Stack contains fewer than _n_ elements,
 # returns them all. If this Stack is empty, returns an empty Array.
 def_delegator :@ary, :pop
 
 ##
 # :method: top
 # :call-seq:
 #   top -> obj or nil
 #   top(n) -> ary
 # Returns the topmost element without modifying the stack.
 def_delegator :@ary, :last, :top
 
 ##
 # :method: empty?
 # Returns true if this Stack contains no elements.
 def_delegator :@ary, :empty?
 
 ##
 # :method: size
 # Returns the number of elements in this Stack.
 def_delegator :@ary, :size
 alias length size
 
 # Converts this Stack to a String.
 def to_s
   "#{self.class}#{@ary.inspect}"
 end
 alias inspect to_s

end</lang>

<lang ruby>p s = Stack.new # => Stack[] p s.empty? # => true p s.size # => 0 p s.top # => nil p s.pop # => nil p s.pop(1) # => [] p s.push(1) # => Stack[1] p s.push(2, 3) # => Stack[1, 2, 3] p s.top # => 3 p s.top(2) # => [2, 3] p s # => Stack[1, 2, 3] p s.size # => 3 p s.pop # => 3 p s.pop(1) # => [2] p s.empty? # => false

p s = Stack[:a, :b, :c] # => Stack[:a, :b, :c] p s << :d # => Stack[:a, :b, :c, :d] p s.pop # => :d</lang>

Run BASIC

<lang runbasic>dim stack$(10) ' stack of ten global stack$ global stackEnd

for i = 1 to 5 ' push 5 values to the stack

a$ = push$(chr$(i + 64))
print "Pushed ";chr$(i + 64);" stack has ";stackEnd

next i

print "Pop Value:";pop$();" stack has ";stackEnd ' pop last in print "Pop Value:";pop$();" stack has ";stackEnd ' pop last in

e$ = mt$() ' MT the stack print "Empty stack. stack has ";stackEnd

' ------ PUSH the stack FUNCTION push$(val$) stackEnd = stackEnd + 1 ' if more than 10 then lose the oldest if stackEnd > 10 then

  for i = 0 to 9
     stack$(i) = stack$(i+1)
  next i
  stackEnd   = 10

end if stack$(stackEnd) = val$ END FUNCTION

' ------ POP the stack ----- FUNCTION pop$() if stackEnd = 0 then

  pop$     = "Stack is MT"
 else
  pop$     = stack$(stackEnd)                        ' pop last in
  stackEnd = max(stackEnd - 1,0)

end if END FUNCTION

' ------ MT the stack ------ FUNCTION mt$()

 stackEnd = 0

END FUNCTION</lang>

Output:
Pushed A stack has 1
Pushed B stack has 2
Pushed C stack has 3
Pushed D stack has 4
Pushed E stack has 5
Pop Value:E stack has 4
Pop Value:D stack has 3
Empty stack. stack has 0

Rust

Using the standard library

One could just use a vector (Vec<T>) which is part of the standard library

<lang rust>fn main() {

   let mut stack = Vec::new();
   stack.push("Element1");
   stack.push("Element2");
   stack.push("Element3");
   assert_eq!(Some(&"Element3"), stack.last());
   assert_eq!(Some("Element3"), stack.pop());
   assert_eq!(Some("Element2"), stack.pop());
   assert_eq!(Some("Element1"), stack.pop());
   assert_eq!(None, stack.pop());

}</lang>

Simple implementation

Simply uses a singly-linked list. <lang rust>type Link<T> = Option<Box<Frame<T>>>;

pub struct Stack<T> {

   head: Link<T>,

} struct Frame<T> {

   elem: T,
   next: Link<T>,

}

/// Iterate by value (consumes list) pub struct IntoIter<T>(Stack<T>); impl<T> Iterator for IntoIter<T> {

   type Item = T;
   fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> {
       self.0.pop()
   }

}

/// Iterate by immutable reference pub struct Iter<'a, T: 'a> {

   next: Option<&'a Frame<T>>,

} impl<'a, T> Iterator for Iter<'a, T> { // Iterate by immutable reference

   type Item = &'a T;
   fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> {
       self.next.take().map(|frame| {
           self.next = frame.next.as_ref().map(|frame| &**frame);
           &frame.elem
       })
   }

}

/// Iterate by mutable reference pub struct IterMut<'a, T: 'a> {

   next: Option<&'a mut Frame<T>>,

} impl<'a, T> Iterator for IterMut<'a, T> {

   type Item = &'a mut T;
   fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> {
       self.next.take().map(|frame| {
           self.next = frame.next.as_mut().map(|frame| &mut **frame);
           &mut frame.elem
       })
   }

}


impl<T> Stack<T> {

   /// Return new, empty stack
   pub fn new() -> Self {
       Stack { head: None }
   }
   /// Add element to top of the stack
   pub fn push(&mut self, elem: T) {
       let new_frame = Box::new(Frame {
           elem: elem,
           next: self.head.take(),
       });
       self.head = Some(new_frame);
   }
   /// Remove element from top of stack, returning the value
   pub fn pop(&mut self) -> Option<T> {
       self.head.take().map(|frame| { 
           let frame = *frame;
           self.head = frame.next;
           frame.elem
       })
   }
   /// Get immutable reference to top element of the stack
   pub fn peek(&self) -> Option<&T> {
       self.head.as_ref().map(|frame| &frame.elem)
   }
   /// Get mutable reference to top element on the stack
   pub fn peek_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T> {
       self.head.as_mut().map(|frame| &mut frame.elem)
   }
   /// Iterate over stack elements by value
   pub fn into_iter(self) -> IntoIter<T> {
       IntoIter(self)
   }
   /// Iterate over stack elements by immutable reference
   pub fn iter<'a>(&'a self) -> Iter<'a,T> {
       Iter { next: self.head.as_ref().map(|frame| &**frame) }
   }
   /// Iterate over stack elements by mutable reference
   pub fn iter_mut(&mut self) -> IterMut<T> {
       IterMut { next: self.head.as_mut().map(|frame| &mut **frame) }
   }

}

// The Drop trait tells the compiler how to free an object after it goes out of scope. // By default, the compiler would do this recursively which *could* blow the stack for // extraordinarily long lists. This simply tells it to do it iteratively. impl<T> Drop for Stack<T> {

   fn drop(&mut self) {
       let mut cur_link = self.head.take();
       while let Some(mut boxed_frame) = cur_link {
           cur_link = boxed_frame.next.take();
       }
   }

}</lang>

Sather

This one uses a builtin linked list to keep the values pushed onto the stack. <lang sather>class STACK{T} is

 private attr stack :LLIST{T};
 create:SAME is 
   res ::= new;
   res.stack := #LLIST{T};
   return res;
 end;
 push(elt: T) is
   stack.insert_front(elt);    
 end;
 pop: T is
   if ~stack.is_empty then
     stack.rewind;
     r ::= stack.current;
     stack.delete;
     return r;
   else
     raise "stack empty!\n";
   end;
 end;
 top: T is
   stack.rewind;
   return stack.current;
 end;
 is_empty: BOOL is
   return stack.is_empty;
 end;

end;</lang>

<lang sather>class MAIN is

 main is
   s ::= #STACK{INT};
   #OUT + "push values...\n";
   s.push(3);
   s.push(2);
   s.push(1);
   s.push(0);
   #OUT + "retrieving them...\n";
   loop
     #OUT + s.pop + "\n";
   until!(s.is_empty); end;
 end;

end;</lang> Sather library has the abstract class $STACK{T}, but using this forces us to implement other methods too.

Scala

The Do it yourself approach: <lang Scala>class Stack[T] {

 private var items = List[T]()
 def isEmpty = items.isEmpty
 def peek = items match {
   case List()       => error("Stack empty")
   case head :: rest => head
 }
 def pop = items match {
   case List()       => error("Stack empty")
   case head :: rest => items = rest; head
 }
 def push(value: T) = items = value +: items

}</lang> Or use the standard Scala library. Slightly modified to meet to requirements of this task. <lang scala>import collection.mutable.{ Stack => Stak }

class Stack[T] extends Stak[T] {

 override def pop: T = {
   if (this.length == 0) error("Can't Pop from an empty Stack.")
   else super.pop
 }
 def peek: T = this.head

}</lang>A test could be:<lang Scala>object StackTest extends App {

 val stack = new Stack[String]
 stack.push("Peter Pan")
 stack.push("Suske & Wiske", "Alice in Wonderland")
 assert(stack.peek == "Alice in Wonderland")
 assert(stack.pop() == "Alice in Wonderland")
 assert(stack.pop() == "Suske & Wiske")
 assert(stack.pop() == "Peter Pan")
 println("Completed without errors")

}</lang>

Scheme

This version uses primitive message passing. <lang scheme>(define (make-stack)

 (let ((st '()))
   (lambda (message . args)
     (case message
       ((empty?) (null? st))
       ((top) (if (null? st)
                  'empty
                  (car st)))
       ((push) (set! st (cons (car args) st)))
       ((pop) (if (null? st)
                  'empty
                  (let ((result (car st)))
                    (set! st (cdr st))
                    result)))
       (else 'badmsg)))))</lang>

Seed7

<lang seed7>$ include "seed7_05.s7i";

const func type: stack (in type: baseType) is func

 result
   var type: stackType is void;
 begin
   stackType := array baseType;
   const proc: push (inout stackType: aStack, in baseType: top) is func
     begin
        aStack := [] (top) & aStack;
     end func;
   const func baseType: pop (inout stackType: aStack) is func
     result
       var baseType: top is baseType.value;
     begin
       if length(aStack) = 0 then
         raise RANGE_ERROR;
       else
         top := aStack[1];
         aStack := aStack[2 ..];
       end if;
     end func;
   const func boolean: empty (in stackType: aStack) is
     return length(aStack) = 0;
 end func;

const type: intStack is stack(integer);

const proc: main is func

 local
   var intStack: s is intStack.value;
 begin
   push(s, 10);
   push(s, 20);
   writeln(pop(s) = 20);
   writeln(pop(s) = 10);
   writeln(empty(s));
 end func;</lang>

Sidef

Using a built-in array: <lang ruby>var stack = []; stack.push(42); # pushing say stack.pop; # popping say stack.is_empty; # is_emtpy?</lang>

Creating a Stack class: <lang ruby>class Stack(stack=[]) {

   method pop        { stack.pop };
   method push(item) { stack.push(item) };
   method empty      { stack.is_empty };

}

var stack = Stack(); stack.push(42); say stack.pop; # => 42 say stack.empty; # => true</lang>

Slate

From Slate's standard library: <lang slate>collections define: #Stack &parents: {ExtensibleArray}. "An abstraction over ExtensibleArray implementations to follow the stack protocol. The convention is that the Sequence indices run least-to-greatest from bottom to top."

s@(Stack traits) push: obj [s addLast: obj].

s@(Stack traits) pop [s removeLast].

s@(Stack traits) pop: n [s removeLast: n].

s@(Stack traits) top [s last].

s@(Stack traits) top: n [s last: n].

s@(Stack traits) bottom [s first].</lang>

Smalltalk

Smalltalk has a built-in Stack class, instances of which you can send messages: <lang smalltalk> s := Stack new. s push: 1. s push: 2. s push: 3. s pop. s top. "2" </lang>

Swift

Generic stack. <lang Swift>struct Stack<T> {

   var items = [T]()
   var empty:Bool {
       return items.count == 0
   }
   
   func peek() -> T {
       return items[items.count - 1]
   }
   
   mutating func pop() -> T {
       return items.removeLast()
   }
   
   mutating func push(obj:T) {
       items.append(obj)
   }

}

var stack = Stack<Int>() stack.push(1) stack.push(2) println(stack.pop()) println(stack.peek()) stack.pop() println(stack.empty)</lang>

Output:
2
1
true

Tcl

Here's a simple implementation using a list: <lang tcl>proc push {stackvar value} {

   upvar 1 $stackvar stack
   lappend stack $value

} proc pop {stackvar} {

   upvar 1 $stackvar stack
   set value [lindex $stack end]
   set stack [lrange $stack 0 end-1]
   return $value

} proc size {stackvar} {

   upvar 1 $stackvar stack
   llength $stack

} proc empty {stackvar} {

   upvar 1 $stackvar stack
   expr {[size stack] == 0}

} proc peek {stackvar} {

   upvar 1 $stackvar stack
   lindex $stack end

}

set S [list] empty S ;# ==> 1 (true) push S foo empty S ;# ==> 0 (false) push S bar peek S ;# ==> bar pop S ;# ==> bar peek S ;# ==> foo</lang>

Library: Tcllib (Package: struct::stack)

<lang tcl>package require struct::stack struct::stack S S size ;# ==> 0 S push a b c d e S size ;# ==> 5 S peek ;# ==> e S pop ;# ==> e S peek ;# ==> d S pop 4 ;# ==> d c b a S size ;# ==> 0</lang>

UnixPipes

<lang bash>init() { if [ -e stack ]; then rm stack; fi } # force pop to blow up if empty push() { echo $1 >> stack; } pop() { tail -1 stack; x=`head -n -1 stack | wc -c` if [ $x -eq '0' ]; then rm stack; else truncate -s `head -n -1 stack | wc -c` stack fi } empty() { head -n -1 stack |wc -l; } stack_top() { tail -1 stack; }</lang> test it: <lang bash>% push me; push you; push us; push them % pop;pop;pop;pop them us you me</lang>

VBA

Define a class Stack in a class module with that name. <lang vb>'Simple Stack class

'uses a dynamic array of Variants to stack the values 'has read-only property "Size" 'and methods "Push", "Pop", "IsEmpty"

Private myStack() Private myStackHeight As Integer

'method Push Public Function Push(aValue)

 'increase stack height
 myStackHeight = myStackHeight + 1
 ReDim Preserve myStack(myStackHeight)
 myStack(myStackHeight) = aValue

End Function

'method Pop Public Function Pop()

 'check for nonempty stack
 If myStackHeight > 0 Then
   Pop = myStack(myStackHeight)
   myStackHeight = myStackHeight - 1
 Else
   MsgBox "Pop: stack is empty!"
 End If

End Function

'method IsEmpty Public Function IsEmpty() As Boolean

 IsEmpty = (myStackHeight = 0)

End Function

'property Size Property Get Size() As Integer

 Size = myStackHeight

End Property</lang> Usage example: <lang vb>'stack test Public Sub stacktest()

 Dim aStack As New Stack
 With aStack
   'push and pop some value
   .Push 45
   .Push 123.45
   .Pop
   .Push "a string"
   .Push "another string"
   .Pop
   .Push Cos(0.75)
   Debug.Print "stack size is "; .Size
   While Not .IsEmpty
     Debug.Print "pop: "; .Pop
   Wend
   Debug.Print "stack size is "; .Size
   'try to continue popping
   .Pop
 End With

End Sub</lang>

Output:
stacktest
stack size is  3 
pop:  0,731688868873821 
pop: a string
pop:  45 
stack size is  0 

(after wich a message box will pop up)

VBScript

Stack class <lang vb>class stack dim tos dim stack() dim stacksize

private sub class_initialize stacksize = 100 redim stack( stacksize ) tos = 0 end sub

public sub push( x ) stack(tos) = x tos = tos + 1 end sub

public property get stackempty stackempty = ( tos = 0 ) end property

public property get stackfull stackfull = ( tos > stacksize ) end property

public property get stackroom stackroom = stacksize - tos end property

public function pop() pop = stack( tos - 1 ) tos = tos - 1 end function

public sub resizestack( n ) redim preserve stack( n ) stacksize = n if tos > stacksize then tos = stacksize end if end sub end class

dim s set s = new stack s.resizestack 10 wscript.echo s.stackempty dim i for i = 1 to 10 s.push rnd wscript.echo s.stackroom if s.stackroom = 0 then exit for next for i = 1 to 10 wscript.echo s.pop if s.stackempty then exit for next</lang>

Output:

(changes every time)

-1
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0.7090379
0.81449
0.7607236
1.401764E-02
0.7747401
0.301948
0.2895625
0.5795186
0.533424
0.7055475

Wart

Stacks as user-defined objects backed by a list.

<lang wart>def (stack)

 (tag 'stack nil)

mac (push! x s) :qcase `(isa stack ,s)

 `(push! ,x (rep ,s))

mac (pop! s) :qcase `(isa stack ,s)

 `(pop! (rep ,s))

def (empty? s) :case (isa stack s)

 (empty? rep.s)</lang>

Example usage:

s <- (stack)
=> (object stack nil)
push! 3 s
=> (object stack (3))
push! 4 s
=> (object stack (4 3))
push! 5 s
=> (object stack (5 4 3))
pop! s
=> 5
(empty? s)
=> nil
pop! s
=> 4
pop! s
=> 3
(empty? s)
=> 1  # true

XPL0

<lang XPL0>include c:\cxpl\codes; \intrinsic 'code' declarations int Stack(100), SP;

proc Push(I); \Push an integer onto the Stack int I; [SP:= SP+1; Stack(SP):= I; ]; \Push

func Pop; \Pop an integer from the Stack int I; [I:= Stack(SP); SP:= SP-1; return I; ]; \Pop

func Empty; \Return 'true' if Stack is empty return SP<0;

func Top; \Return the integer at top of Stack return Stack(SP);

int I; [SP:= -1; \initialize stack pointer for I:= 0 to 10 do Push(I*I); IntOut(0, Top); CrLf(0); while not Empty do [IntOut(0, Pop); ChOut(0, ^ )]; CrLf(0); ]</lang>

Output:
100
100 81 64 49 36 25 16 9 4 1 0 

zkl

Lists have stack methods so this class is somewhat reduntant <lang zkl>class Stack{

  var [const] stack=L();
  fcn push(x){stack.append(x); self}
  fcn pop    {stack.pop()}
  fcn empty  {(not stack.len())}
  var [proxy] isEmpty = empty;

}</lang>

Output:
var s=Stack();
s.push(5).push("five");
s.isEmpty //-->False
s.pop()   //-->"five"