Class LazyIteratorChain<E>
- All Implemented Interfaces:
Iterator<E>
This class makes multiple iterators look like one to the caller. When any method from the Iterator interface is called, the LazyIteratorChain will delegate to a single underlying Iterator. The LazyIteratorChain will invoke the Iterators in sequence until all Iterators are exhausted.
The Iterators are provided by nextIterator(int) which has to be overridden by
sub-classes and allows to lazily create the Iterators as they are accessed:
return new LazyIteratorChain<String>() {
protected Iterator<String> nextIterator(int count) {
return count == 1 ? Arrays.asList("foo", "bar").iterator() : null;
}
};
Once the inner Iterator's Iterator.hasNext() method returns false,
nextIterator(int) will be called to obtain another iterator, and so on
until nextIterator(int) returns null, indicating that the chain is exhausted.
NOTE: The LazyIteratorChain may contain no iterators. In this case the class will function as an empty iterator.
- Since:
- 4.0
-
Constructor Details
-
LazyIteratorChain
public LazyIteratorChain()
-
-
Method Details
-
hasNext
public boolean hasNext()Return true if any Iterator in the chain has a remaining element. -
next
Returns the next element of the current Iterator- Specified by:
nextin interfaceIterator<E>- Returns:
- element from the current Iterator
- Throws:
NoSuchElementException- if all the Iterators are exhausted
-
remove
public void remove()Removes from the underlying collection the last element returned by the Iterator.As with next() and hasNext(), this method calls remove() on the underlying Iterator. Therefore, this method may throw an UnsupportedOperationException if the underlying Iterator does not support this method.
- Specified by:
removein interfaceIterator<E>- Throws:
UnsupportedOperationException- if the remove operator is not supported by the underlying IteratorIllegalStateException- if the next method has not yet been called, or the remove method has already been called after the last call to the next method.
-