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This artifact provides a single jar that contains all classes required to use remote EJB and JMS, including all dependencies. It is intended for use by those not using maven, maven users should just import the EJB and JMS BOM's instead (shaded JAR's cause lots of problems with maven, as it is very easy to inadvertently end up with different versions on classes on the class path).

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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2012 The Guava Authors
 *
 * 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 com.google.common.collect;

import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull;

import com.google.common.annotations.Beta;
import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible;
import com.google.common.base.Function;
import java.util.ArrayDeque;
import java.util.Deque;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Queue;
import java.util.function.Consumer;
import javax.annotation.CheckForNull;

/**
 * Views elements of a type {@code T} as nodes in a tree, and provides methods to traverse the trees
 * induced by this traverser.
 *
 * 

For example, the tree * *

{@code
 *        h
 *      / | \
 *     /  e  \
 *    d       g
 *   /|\      |
 *  / | \     f
 * a  b  c
 * }
* *

can be iterated over in preorder (hdabcegf), postorder (abcdefgh), or breadth-first order * (hdegabcf). * *

Null nodes are strictly forbidden. * *

For Java 8 users: Because this is an abstract class, not an interface, you can't use a * lambda expression to extend it: * *

{@code
 * // won't work
 * TreeTraverser traverser = node -> node.getChildNodes();
 * }
* * Instead, you can pass a lambda expression to the {@code using} factory method: * *
{@code
 * TreeTraverser traverser = TreeTraverser.using(node -> node.getChildNodes());
 * }
* * @author Louis Wasserman * @since 15.0 * @deprecated Use {@link com.google.common.graph.Traverser} instead. All instance methods have * their equivalent on the result of {@code Traverser.forTree(tree)} where {@code tree} * implements {@code SuccessorsFunction}, which has a similar API as {@link #children} or can be * the same lambda function as passed into {@link #using(Function)}. *

This class is scheduled to be removed in October 2019. */ // TODO(b/68134636): Remove by 2019-10 @Deprecated @Beta @GwtCompatible @ElementTypesAreNonnullByDefault public abstract class TreeTraverser { /** * Returns a tree traverser that uses the given function to navigate from a node to its children. * This is useful if the function instance already exists, or so that you can supply a lambda * expressions. If those circumstances don't apply, you probably don't need to use this; subclass * {@code TreeTraverser} and implement its {@link #children} method directly. * * @since 20.0 * @deprecated Use {@link com.google.common.graph.Traverser#forTree} instead. If you are using a * lambda, these methods have exactly the same signature. */ @Deprecated public static TreeTraverser using( final Function> nodeToChildrenFunction) { checkNotNull(nodeToChildrenFunction); return new TreeTraverser() { @Override public Iterable children(T root) { return nodeToChildrenFunction.apply(root); } }; } /** Returns the children of the specified node. Must not contain null. */ public abstract Iterable children(T root); /** * Returns an unmodifiable iterable over the nodes in a tree structure, using pre-order traversal. * That is, each node's subtrees are traversed after the node itself is returned. * *

No guarantees are made about the behavior of the traversal when nodes change while iteration * is in progress or when the iterators generated by {@link #children} are advanced. * * @deprecated Use {@link com.google.common.graph.Traverser#depthFirstPreOrder} instead, which has * the same behavior. */ @Deprecated public final FluentIterable preOrderTraversal(final T root) { checkNotNull(root); return new FluentIterable() { @Override public UnmodifiableIterator iterator() { return preOrderIterator(root); } @Override public void forEach(Consumer action) { checkNotNull(action); new Consumer() { @Override public void accept(T t) { action.accept(t); children(t).forEach(this); } }.accept(root); } }; } UnmodifiableIterator preOrderIterator(T root) { return new PreOrderIterator(root); } private final class PreOrderIterator extends UnmodifiableIterator { private final Deque> stack; PreOrderIterator(T root) { this.stack = new ArrayDeque<>(); stack.addLast(Iterators.singletonIterator(checkNotNull(root))); } @Override public boolean hasNext() { return !stack.isEmpty(); } @Override public T next() { Iterator itr = stack.getLast(); // throws NSEE if empty T result = checkNotNull(itr.next()); if (!itr.hasNext()) { stack.removeLast(); } Iterator childItr = children(result).iterator(); if (childItr.hasNext()) { stack.addLast(childItr); } return result; } } /** * Returns an unmodifiable iterable over the nodes in a tree structure, using post-order * traversal. That is, each node's subtrees are traversed before the node itself is returned. * *

No guarantees are made about the behavior of the traversal when nodes change while iteration * is in progress or when the iterators generated by {@link #children} are advanced. * * @deprecated Use {@link com.google.common.graph.Traverser#depthFirstPostOrder} instead, which * has the same behavior. */ @Deprecated public final FluentIterable postOrderTraversal(final T root) { checkNotNull(root); return new FluentIterable() { @Override public UnmodifiableIterator iterator() { return postOrderIterator(root); } @Override public void forEach(Consumer action) { checkNotNull(action); new Consumer() { @Override public void accept(T t) { children(t).forEach(this); action.accept(t); } }.accept(root); } }; } UnmodifiableIterator postOrderIterator(T root) { return new PostOrderIterator(root); } private static final class PostOrderNode { final T root; final Iterator childIterator; PostOrderNode(T root, Iterator childIterator) { this.root = checkNotNull(root); this.childIterator = checkNotNull(childIterator); } } private final class PostOrderIterator extends AbstractIterator { private final ArrayDeque> stack; PostOrderIterator(T root) { this.stack = new ArrayDeque<>(); stack.addLast(expand(root)); } @Override @CheckForNull protected T computeNext() { while (!stack.isEmpty()) { PostOrderNode top = stack.getLast(); if (top.childIterator.hasNext()) { T child = top.childIterator.next(); stack.addLast(expand(child)); } else { stack.removeLast(); return top.root; } } return endOfData(); } private PostOrderNode expand(T t) { return new PostOrderNode(t, children(t).iterator()); } } /** * Returns an unmodifiable iterable over the nodes in a tree structure, using breadth-first * traversal. That is, all the nodes of depth 0 are returned, then depth 1, then 2, and so on. * *

No guarantees are made about the behavior of the traversal when nodes change while iteration * is in progress or when the iterators generated by {@link #children} are advanced. * * @deprecated Use {@link com.google.common.graph.Traverser#breadthFirst} instead, which has the * same behavior. */ @Deprecated public final FluentIterable breadthFirstTraversal(final T root) { checkNotNull(root); return new FluentIterable() { @Override public UnmodifiableIterator iterator() { return new BreadthFirstIterator(root); } }; } private final class BreadthFirstIterator extends UnmodifiableIterator implements PeekingIterator { private final Queue queue; BreadthFirstIterator(T root) { this.queue = new ArrayDeque(); queue.add(root); } @Override public boolean hasNext() { return !queue.isEmpty(); } @Override public T peek() { return queue.element(); } @Override public T next() { T result = queue.remove(); Iterables.addAll(queue, children(result)); return result; } } }





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