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fastutil extends the Java Collections Framework by providing type-specific maps, sets, lists, and queues with a small memory footprint and fast access and insertion; it provides also big (64-bit) arrays, sets and lists, sorting algorithms, fast, practical I/O classes for binary and text files, and facilities for memory mapping large files. Note that if you have both this jar and fastutil-core.jar in your dependencies, fastutil-core.jar should be excluded.

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/*
	* Copyright (C) 2002-2023 Sebastiano Vigna
	*
	* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
	* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
	* You may obtain a copy of the License at
	*
	*     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
	*
	* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
	* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
	* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
	* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
	* limitations under the License.
	*/
package it.unimi.dsi.fastutil.ints;

import java.lang.Iterable;
import java.util.Objects;
import java.util.function.Consumer;

/**
 * A type-specific {@link Iterable} that strengthens that specification of {@link #iterator()} and
 * {@link #forEach(Consumer)}.
 *
 * 

* Note that whenever there exist a primitive consumer in {@link java.util.function} (e.g., * {@link java.util.function.IntConsumer}), trying to access any version of * {@link #forEach(Consumer)} using a lambda expression with untyped arguments will generate an * ambiguous method error. This can be easily solved by specifying the type of the argument, as in * *

*    intIterable.forEach((int x) -> { // Do something with x });
 * 
*

* The same problem plagues, for example, * {@link java.util.PrimitiveIterator.OfInt#forEachRemaining(java.util.function.IntConsumer)}. * *

* Warning: Java will let you write “colon” {@code for} statements with * primitive-type loop variables; however, what is (unfortunately) really happening is that at each * iteration an unboxing (and, in the case of {@code fastutil} type-specific data structures, a * boxing) will be performed. Watch out. * * @see Iterable */ public interface IntIterable extends Iterable { /** * Returns a type-specific iterator. * * @apiNote Note that this specification strengthens the one given in {@link Iterable#iterator()}. * * @return a type-specific iterator. * @see Iterable#iterator() */ @Override IntIterator iterator(); /** * Returns a primitive iterator on the elements of this iterable. *

* * This method is identical to {@link #iterator()}, as the type-specific iterator is already * compatible with the JDK's primitive iterators. It only exists for compatibility with the other * primitive types' {@code Iterable}s that have use for widened iterators. * * @return a primitive iterator on the elements of this iterable. * @since 8.5.0 */ default IntIterator intIterator() { return iterator(); } // If you change these default spliterator methods, you will likely need to update Collection, List, // Set, and SortedSet too. /** * Returns a type-specific spliterator on the elements of this iterable. * * @apiNote Note that this specification strengthens the one given in * {@link java.lang.Iterable#spliterator()}. * * @return a type-specific spliterator on the elements of this iterable. * @since 8.5.0 */ @Override default IntSpliterator spliterator() { return IntSpliterators.asSpliteratorUnknownSize(iterator(), 0); } /** * Returns a primitive spliterator on the elements of this iterable. *

* * This method is identical to {@link #spliterator()}, as the type-specific spliterator is already * compatible with the JDK's primitive spliterators. It only exists for compatibility with the other * primitive types' {@code Iterable}s that have use for widened spliterators. * * @return a primitive spliterator on the elements of this collection. * @since 8.5.0 */ default IntSpliterator intSpliterator() { return spliterator(); } /** * Performs the given action for each element of this type-specific {@link java.lang.Iterable} until * all elements have been processed or the action throws an exception. * * @param action the action to be performed for each element. * @see java.lang.Iterable#forEach(java.util.function.Consumer) * @since 8.0.0 * @apiNote Implementing classes should generally override this method, and take the default * implementation of the other overloads which will delegate to this method (after proper * conversions). */ default void forEach(final java.util.function.IntConsumer action) { Objects.requireNonNull(action); iterator().forEachRemaining(action); } // Because our primitive Consumer interface extends both the JDK's primitive // and object Consumer interfaces, calling this method with it would be ambiguous. // This overload exists to pass it to the proper primitive overload. /** * Performs the given action for each element of this type-specific {@link java.lang.Iterable} until * all elements have been processed or the action throws an exception. * *

* WARNING: Overriding this method is almost always a mistake, as this overload only exists * to disambiguate. Instead, override the {@code forEach()} overload that uses the JDK's primitive * consumer type (e.g. {@link java.util.function.IntConsumer}). * *

* If Java supported final default methods, this would be one, but sadly it does not. * *

* If you checked and are overriding the version with {@code java.util.function.XConsumer}, and * still see this warning, then your IDE is incorrectly conflating this method with the proper * method to override, and you can safely ignore this message. * * @param action the action to be performed for each element. * @see java.lang.Iterable#forEach(java.util.function.Consumer) * @since 8.5.0 */ default void forEach(final IntConsumer action) { forEach((java.util.function.IntConsumer)action); } /** * {@inheritDoc} * * @deprecated Please use the corresponding type-specific method instead. */ @Deprecated @Override default void forEach(final Consumer action) { Objects.requireNonNull(action); // The instanceof and cast is required for performance. Without it, calls routed through this // overload using a primitive consumer would go through the slow lambda. forEach(action instanceof java.util.function.IntConsumer ? (java.util.function.IntConsumer)action : (java.util.function.IntConsumer)action::accept); } }





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