/*
* Copyright (c) 2008 - 2009
* Jonathan Schleifer <js@webkeks.org>
*
* All rights reserved.
*
* This file is part of libobjfw. It may be distributed under the terms of the
* Q Public License 1.0, which can be found in the file LICENSE included in
* the packaging of this file.
*/
#import "OFObject.h"
#import "OFList.h"
#import "OFDictionary.h"
/**
* An iterator pair combines a key and its object in a single struct.
*/
typedef struct __of_iterator_pair {
/// The key
id key;
/// The object for the key
id object;
} of_iterator_pair_t;
extern int _OFIterator_reference;
/**
* The OFIterator class provides methods to iterate through objects.
*/
@interface OFIterator: OFObject
{
struct of_dictionary_bucket *data;
size_t size;
size_t pos;
}
- initWithData: (struct of_dictionary_bucket*)data
size: (size_t)size;
/**
* \return A struct containing the next key and object
*/
- (of_iterator_pair_t)nextKeyObjectPair;
/**
* Resets the iterator, so the next call to nextObject returns the first again.
*/
- reset;
@end
@interface OFDictionary (OFIterator)
/**
* Creates an OFIterator for the dictionary.
*
* It will copy the data of the OFDictionary so that OFIterator will always
* operate on the data that was present when it was created. If you changed the
* OFDictionary and want to operate on the new data, you need to create a new
* OFIterator, as using reset will only reset the OFIterator, but won't update
* the data. It will also retain the data inside the OFDictionary so the
* OFIterator still works after you released the OFDictionary. Thus, if you want
* to get rid of the objects in the OFDictionary, you also need to release the
* OFIterator.
*
* \return An OFIterator for the OFDictionary
*/
- (OFIterator*)iterator;
@end