Iterator pattern
In object-oriented programming, the iterator pattern is a design pattern in which an iterator is used to traverse a container and access the container's elements. The iterator pattern decouples algorithms from containers; in some cases, algorithms are necessarily container-specific and thus cannot be decoupled.
For example, the hypothetical algorithm SearchForElement can be implemented generally using a specified type of iterator rather than implementing it as a container-specific algorithm. This allows SearchForElement to be used on any container that supports the required type of iterator.
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Definition
The essence of the Iterator Factory method Pattern is to "Provide a way to access the elements of an aggregate object sequentially without exposing its underlying representation.".[1]
Language-specific implementation
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Some languages standardize syntax. C++ and Python are notable examples.
C++
C++ implements iterators with the semantics of pointers in that language. In C++, a class can overload all of the pointer operations, so an iterator can be implemented that acts more or less like a pointer, complete with dereference, increment, and decrement. This has the advantage that C++ algorithms such as std::sort
can immediately be applied to plain old memory buffers, and that there is no new syntax to learn. However, it requires an "end" iterator to test for equality, rather than allowing an iterator to know that it has reached the end. In C++ language, we say that an iterator models the iterator concept.
Java
Java has the Iterator
interface.
As of Java 5, objects implementing the Iterable
interface, which returns an Iterator
from its only method, can be traversed using the enhanced for
loop syntax.[2] The Collection
interface from the Java collections framework extends Iterable
.
Python
Python prescribes a syntax for iterators as part of the language itself, so that language keywords such as for
work with what Python calls sequences. A sequence has an __iter__()
method that returns an iterator object. The "iterator protocol" requires next()
return the next element or raise a StopIteration
exception upon reaching the end of the sequence. Iterators also provide an __iter__()
method returning themselves so that they can also be iterated over e.g., using a for
loop. Generators are available since 2.2.
In Python 3, next()
was renamed __next__()
.[3]
PHP
PHP supports the iterator pattern via the Iterator interface, as part of the standard distribution.[4] Objects that implement the interface can be iterated over with the foreach
language construct.
Example of patterns using PHP:
<?php
// BookIterator.php
namespace DesignPatterns;
class BookIterator implements \Iterator
{
private $i_position = 0;
private $booksCollection;
public function __construct(BookCollection $booksCollection)
{
$this->booksCollection = $booksCollection;
}
public function current()
{
return $this->booksCollection->getTitle($this->i_position);
}
public function key()
{
return $this->i_position;
}
public function next()
{
$this->i_position++;
}
public function rewind()
{
$this->i_position = 0;
}
public function valid()
{
return !is_null($this->booksCollection->getTitle($this->i_position));
}
}
<?php
// BookCollection.php
namespace DesignPatterns;
class BookCollection implements \IteratorAggregate
{
private $a_titles = array();
public function getIterator()
{
return new BookIterator($this);
}
public function addTitle($string)
{
$this->a_titles[] = $string;
}
public function getTitle($key)
{
if (isset($this->a_titles[$key])) {
return $this->a_titles[$key];
}
return null;
}
public function is_empty()
{
return empty($a_titles);
}
}
<?php
// index.php
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
use DesignPatterns\BookCollection;
$booksCollection = new BookCollection();
$booksCollection->addTitle('Design Patterns');
$booksCollection->addTitle('PHP7 is the best');
$booksCollection->addTitle('Laravel Rules');
$booksCollection->addTitle('DHH Rules');
foreach($booksCollection as $book){
var_dump($book);
}
OUTPUT
string(15) "Design Patterns" string(16) "PHP7 is the best" string(13) "Laravel Rules" string(9) "DHH Rules"
See also
- Iterator
- Composite pattern
- Container (data structure)
- Design pattern (computer science)
- Observer pattern
References
- ↑ Gang Of Four
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
The Wikibook Computer Science Design Patterns has a page on the topic of: Iterator implementations in various languages |