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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) 2007 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.checkState;
import static com.google.common.collect.NullnessCasts.uncheckedCastNullableTToT;

import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue;
import java.util.NoSuchElementException;
import javax.annotation.CheckForNull;
import org.checkerframework.checker.nullness.qual.Nullable;

/**
 * This class provides a skeletal implementation of the {@code Iterator} interface, to make this
 * interface easier to implement for certain types of data sources.
 *
 * 

{@code Iterator} requires its implementations to support querying the end-of-data status * without changing the iterator's state, using the {@link #hasNext} method. But many data sources, * such as {@link java.io.Reader#read()}, do not expose this information; the only way to discover * whether there is any data left is by trying to retrieve it. These types of data sources are * ordinarily difficult to write iterators for. But using this class, one must implement only the * {@link #computeNext} method, and invoke the {@link #endOfData} method when appropriate. * *

Another example is an iterator that skips over null elements in a backing iterator. This could * be implemented as: * *

{@code
 * public static Iterator skipNulls(final Iterator in) {
 *   return new AbstractIterator() {
 *     protected String computeNext() {
 *       while (in.hasNext()) {
 *         String s = in.next();
 *         if (s != null) {
 *           return s;
 *         }
 *       }
 *       return endOfData();
 *     }
 *   };
 * }
 * }
* *

This class supports iterators that include null elements. * * @author Kevin Bourrillion * @since 2.0 */ // When making changes to this class, please also update the copy at // com.google.common.base.AbstractIterator @GwtCompatible @ElementTypesAreNonnullByDefault public abstract class AbstractIterator extends UnmodifiableIterator { private State state = State.NOT_READY; /** Constructor for use by subclasses. */ protected AbstractIterator() {} private enum State { /** We have computed the next element and haven't returned it yet. */ READY, /** We haven't yet computed or have already returned the element. */ NOT_READY, /** We have reached the end of the data and are finished. */ DONE, /** We've suffered an exception and are kaput. */ FAILED, } @CheckForNull private T next; /** * Returns the next element. Note: the implementation must call {@link #endOfData()} when * there are no elements left in the iteration. Failure to do so could result in an infinite loop. * *

The initial invocation of {@link #hasNext()} or {@link #next()} calls this method, as does * the first invocation of {@code hasNext} or {@code next} following each successful call to * {@code next}. Once the implementation either invokes {@code endOfData} or throws an exception, * {@code computeNext} is guaranteed to never be called again. * *

If this method throws an exception, it will propagate outward to the {@code hasNext} or * {@code next} invocation that invoked this method. Any further attempts to use the iterator will * result in an {@link IllegalStateException}. * *

The implementation of this method may not invoke the {@code hasNext}, {@code next}, or * {@link #peek()} methods on this instance; if it does, an {@code IllegalStateException} will * result. * * @return the next element if there was one. If {@code endOfData} was called during execution, * the return value will be ignored. * @throws RuntimeException if any unrecoverable error happens. This exception will propagate * outward to the {@code hasNext()}, {@code next()}, or {@code peek()} invocation that invoked * this method. Any further attempts to use the iterator will result in an {@link * IllegalStateException}. */ @CheckForNull protected abstract T computeNext(); /** * Implementations of {@link #computeNext} must invoke this method when there are no * elements left in the iteration. * * @return {@code null}; a convenience so your {@code computeNext} implementation can use the * simple statement {@code return endOfData();} */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue @CheckForNull protected final T endOfData() { state = State.DONE; return null; } @Override public final boolean hasNext() { checkState(state != State.FAILED); switch (state) { case DONE: return false; case READY: return true; default: } return tryToComputeNext(); } private boolean tryToComputeNext() { state = State.FAILED; // temporary pessimism next = computeNext(); if (state != State.DONE) { state = State.READY; return true; } return false; } @CanIgnoreReturnValue // TODO(kak): Should we remove this? @Override @ParametricNullness public final T next() { if (!hasNext()) { throw new NoSuchElementException(); } state = State.NOT_READY; // Safe because hasNext() ensures that tryToComputeNext() has put a T into `next`. T result = uncheckedCastNullableTToT(next); next = null; return result; } /** * Returns the next element in the iteration without advancing the iteration, according to the * contract of {@link PeekingIterator#peek()}. * *

Implementations of {@code AbstractIterator} that wish to expose this functionality should * implement {@code PeekingIterator}. */ @ParametricNullness public final T peek() { if (!hasNext()) { throw new NoSuchElementException(); } // Safe because hasNext() ensures that tryToComputeNext() has put a T into `next`. return uncheckedCastNullableTToT(next); } }





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