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// Copyright (c) 2018-2022 Saxonica Limited
// This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0.
// If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
// This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0.
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

package net.sf.saxon.om;

import net.sf.saxon.trans.UncheckedXPathException;

import java.io.Closeable;

/**
 * A SequenceIterator is used to iterate over any XPath 2 sequence (of values or nodes).
 * To get the next item in a sequence, call next(); if this returns null, you've
 * reached the end of the sequence.
 * 

The objects returned by the SequenceIterator will generally be either nodes * (class NodeInfo), singleton values (class AtomicValue), or function items: these are represented * collectively by the interface {@link Item}.

*

The interface to SequenceIterator is changed in Saxon 9.6 to drop support for the * current() and position() methods. Internal iterators no longer need to maintain the values * of the current item or the current position. This information is needed (in general) only * for an iterator that acts as the current focus; that is, an iterator stored as the current * iterator in an XPathContext. SequenceIterators than maintain the value of position() * and last() are represented by the interface {@link FocusIterator}.

* * @since 8.4. Significant changes in 9.6. Generics added in 9.9, removed again in 10.0. * getProperties() method dropped in 11 (instead, callers should check whether the * iterator implements a more specific interface such as {@link net.sf.saxon.expr.LastPositionFinder}) */ public interface SequenceIterator extends Closeable { /** * Get the next item in the sequence. This method changes the state of the * iterator. * * @return the next item, or null if there are no more items. Once a call * on next() has returned null, no further calls should be made. The preferred * action for an iterator if subsequent calls on next() are made is to return * null again, and all implementations within Saxon follow this rule. * @throws UncheckedXPathException if an error occurs retrieving the next item * @since 8.4. Changed in 11 so it no longer throws a checked exception; * instead, any error that occurs is thrown as an unchecked exception. */ /*@Nullable*/ Item next(); /** * Close the iterator. This indicates to the supplier of the data that the client * does not require any more items to be delivered by the iterator. This may enable the * supplier to release resources. After calling close(), no further calls on the * iterator should be made; if further calls are made, the effect of such calls is undefined. *

For example, the iterator returned by the unparsed-text-lines() function has a close() method * that causes the underlying input stream to be closed, whether or not the file has been read * to completion.

*

Closing an iterator is important when the data is being "pushed" in * another thread. Closing the iterator terminates that thread and means that it needs to do * no additional work. Indeed, failing to close the iterator may cause the push thread to hang * waiting for the buffer to be emptied.

*

Closing an iterator is not necessary if the iterator is read to completion: if a call * on {@link #next()} returns null, the iterator will be closed automatically. An explicit * call on {@link #close()} is needed only when iteration is abandoned prematurely.

* * @since 9.1. Default implementation added in 9.9. */ @Override default void close() { } /** * Calling this method instructs the iterator to release any resources it holds, while still * remaining able to deliver the remaining items in the sequence. This may require * the iterator to calculate the rest of the sequence eagerly. The method is called by a client * if it anticipates that it might not read the iterator to completion, but it cannot * guarantee that {@link #close()} will be called when no more items are needed. * @since 10.7 */ default void discharge() { } }




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