Provided by: libarray-iterator-perl_0.135-1_all bug

VERSION

       Version 0.135

SYNOPSIS

         use Array::Iterator::LegacyBiDirectional;

         # create an instance of the iterator
         my $i = Array::Iterator::LegacyBiDirectional->new(1 .. 100);

         while ($some_condition_exists) {
             # get the latest item from
             # the iterator
             my $current = $i->get_next();
             # ...
             if ($something_happens) {
                 # back up the iterator
                 $current = $i->get_previous();
             }
         }

DESCRIPTION

       This is the old BiDirectional code.  It is kept for users who want the old way that the pointer was kept.
       See RT#126034 for further details.

       Occasionally it is useful for an iterator to go in both directions, forward and backward. One example
       would be token processing. When looping though tokens it is sometimes necessary to advance forward
       looking for a match to a rule. If the match fails, a bi-directional iterator can be moved back so that
       the next rule can be tried.

METHODS

       This is a subclass of Array::Iterator, only those methods that have been added are documented here, refer
       to the Array::Iterator documentation for more information.

       has_previous([$n])
           This method works much like "hasNext" does, it will return true (1) unless the beginning of the array
           has been reached, and false (0) otherwise.

           Optional argument has the same meaning except that it specifies $nth previous element.

       previous
           This  method  is  much  like  "next".  It will return the previous item in the iterator, and throw an
           exception if it attempts to reach past the beginning of the array.

       get_previous
           This method is much like "get_next". It will return the previous item in  the  iterator,  and  return
           undef if it attempts to reach past the beginning of the array.

       look_back([$n])
           This  is  the  counterpart to "peek", it will return the previous items in the iterator, but will not
           affect the internal counter.

           Optional argument has the same meaning except that it specifies $nth previous element.

SEE ALSO

       This is a subclass of Array::Iterator, please refer to it for more documentation.

ORIGINAL AUTHOR

       stevan little, <stevan@iinteractive.com>

ORIGINAL COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright 2004 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.

       <http://www.iinteractive.com>

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under  the  same  terms  as  Perl
       itself.

perl v5.40.1                                       2025-03-01             Array::Iterator...cyBiDirectional(3pm)