Question

I have Book and BookList classes. BookList is something like this:

public class BookList 
{
    private final List<Book> bList = new ArrayList<Book>();

    public int size() { return bList.size(); }

    public boolean isEmpty() {  ... }

    public boolean contains(Book b) { ...  }

    public boolean add(Book b) { ...  }

    public boolean remove(Book b) {  .. } 

    public void clear() { ... }

    public Book get(int index) { ... }
 
}

In my main class I want to print titles of books with in a for each loop:

for(Book b : bList)
{
    b.print();
}

Eclipse says:

Can only iterate over an array or an instance of java.lang.Iterable

How can I get this working?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You need to implement the Iterable interface, which means you need to implement the iterator() method. In your case, this might look something like this:

public class BookList implements Iterable<Book> {
    private final List<Book> bList = new ArrayList<Book>();

    @Override
    public Iterator<Book> iterator() {
        return bList.iterator();
    }

    ...
}

OTHER TIPS

Implement the Iterable interface. That means you need to implement a method that returns an Iterator object that will iterate over the elements of a BookList.

In this case, your iterator() method could just return the result of calling bList.iterator(). (That will cause for (Book b : somBookList) to iterate over the Book objects in the BookList.bList ... )

In other cases, you might need to write your own Iterator<T> implementation class, complete with T next(), boolean hasNext() and remove() methods. For instance, if you wanted to prevent external code from removing elements from the BookList via your iterator, you might implement it like this:

public class BookList implements Iterable<Book> {
    private final List<Book> bList = new ArrayList<Book>();
    //...
    @Override
    public Iterator<Book> iterator() {
        return new Iterator<Book> () {
            private final Iterator<Book> iter = bList.iterator();

            @Override
            public boolean hasNext() {
                return iter.hasNext();
            }

            @Override
            public Book next() {
                return iter.next();
            }

            @Override
            public void remove() {
                throw new UnsupportedOperationException("no changes allowed");
            }
        };
    }
}

Here we can see the simple implementation of LinkedList with iterator and foreach syntax

class LinkedList implements Iterable<LinkedList.Node>{
    private Node node;
    public void add(Object data){
        if(!Optional.ofNullable(node).isPresent()){
            node = new Node();
            node.setData(data);
        }else{
            Node node = new Node();
            node.setData(data);
            Node lastNode = getLastNode(this.node);
            lastNode.setNext(node);
        }
    }

    private Node getLastNode(Node node){
        if(node.getNext()==null){
            return node;
        }else{
            return getLastNode(node.getNext());
        }
    } 

    class Node{
        private Object data;
        private Node next;
        public Object getData() {
            return data;
        }
        public void setData(Object data) {
            this.data = data;
        }
        public Node getNext() {
            return next;
        }
        public void setNext(Node next) {
            this.next = next;
        }
    }

    public Iterator<Node> iterator() {
        return new NodeIterator();
    }

    class NodeIterator implements Iterator<Node>{
        private Node current;

        public boolean hasNext() {
            if(current == null){
                current = node;
                return Optional.ofNullable(current).isPresent();
            }else{
                current = current.next;
                return Optional.ofNullable(current).isPresent();
            }
        }

        public Node next() {
            return current;
        }
    }
}

public class LinkedListImpl {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        LinkedList linkedList = new LinkedList();
        linkedList.add("data1");
        linkedList.add("data2");
        linkedList.add("data3");
        for(LinkedList.Node node: linkedList){
            System.out.println(node.getData());
        }
    }
}

To be more specific about how to "implement the Iterable interface":

public class BookList implements Iterable<Book>
{
    private final List<Book> bList = new ArrayList<Book>();

    ... 

    @Override
    public Iterator<Book> iterator()
    {
        return bList.iterator();
    }
}

For making a class iteratable you need to implement Iterable Interface.

a) Declare the class as below

public class BookList implements Iterable<Book>

b) Override the iterator() Method

Read More. Hope it will help you.

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