Interface PeekableLongIterator

All Superinterfaces:
Cloneable, LongIterator

public interface PeekableLongIterator extends LongIterator
Simple extension to the IntIterator interface. It allows you to "skip" values using the advanceIfNeeded method, and to look at the value without advancing (peekNext). This richer interface enables efficient algorithms over iterators of longs.
  • Method Summary

    Modifier and Type
    Method
    Description
    void
    advanceIfNeeded(long thresholdVal)
    If needed, for a forwards iterator advance as long as the next value is smaller than thresholdVal For a reverse iterator advance as long as the next value is greater than thresholdVal The advanceIfNeeded method is used for performance reasons, to skip over unnecessary repeated calls to next.
    Creates a copy of the iterator.
    long
    Look at the next value without advancing The peek is useful when working with several iterators at once.

    Methods inherited from interface org.roaringbitmap.longlong.LongIterator

    hasNext, next
  • Method Details

    • advanceIfNeeded

      void advanceIfNeeded(long thresholdVal)
      If needed, for a forwards iterator advance as long as the next value is smaller than thresholdVal For a reverse iterator advance as long as the next value is greater than thresholdVal The advanceIfNeeded method is used for performance reasons, to skip over unnecessary repeated calls to next. Suppose for example that you wish to compute the intersection between an ordered list of longs (e.g., longs[] x = {1,4,5}) and a PeekableIntIterator. You might do it as follows...
      
           PeekableLongIterator j = // get an iterator
           long val = // first value from my other data structure
           j.advanceIfNeeded(val);
           while ( j.hasNext() ) {
             if(j.next() == val) {
               // ah! ah! val is in the intersection...
               // do something here
               val = // get next value?
             }
             j.advanceIfNeeded(val);
           }
           
      The benefit of calling advanceIfNeeded is that each such call can be much faster than repeated calls to "next". The underlying implementation can "skip" over some data.
      Parameters:
      thresholdVal - threshold
    • peekNext

      long peekNext()
      Look at the next value without advancing The peek is useful when working with several iterators at once. Suppose that you have 100 iterators, and you want to compute their intersections without materializing the result. You might do it as follows...
      
          PriorityQueue pq = new PriorityQueue(100,
            new Comparator<PeekableIntIterator>() {
                   public int compare(PeekableIntIterator a,
                                      PeekableIntIterator b) {
                       return a.peek() - b.peek();
                   }
               });
       
          //...  populate pq
          
          while(! pq.isEmpty() ) {
            // get iterator with a smallest value
            PeekableLongIterator pi = pq.poll();
            long x = pi.next(); // advance
            // do something with x
            if(pi.hasNext()) pq.add(pi)
          }
          
      Notice how the peek method allows you to compare iterators in a way that the next method could not do.
      Returns:
      next value
    • clone

      Creates a copy of the iterator.
      Specified by:
      clone in interface LongIterator
      Returns:
      a clone of the current iterator