How would I make an iterator out of an ES6 class in the same manner as JS1.7 SomeClass.prototype.__iterator__ = function() {...}
syntax?
[EDIT 16:00]
The following works:
class SomeClass {
constructor() {
}
*[Symbol.iterator]() {
yield '1';
yield '2';
}
//*generator() {
//}
}
an_instance = new SomeClass();
for (let v of an_instance) {
console.log(v);
}
WebStorm flags *[Symbol.iterator]()
with a 'function name expected' warning directly following the asterix, but otherwise this compiles and runs fine with Traceur. (Note WebStorm does not generate any errors for *generator()
.)
You need to specify Symbol.iterator
property for SomeClass
which returns iterator for class instances. Iterator must have next()
method, witch in turn returns object with done
and value
fields. Simplified example:
function SomeClass() {
this._data = [1,2,3,4];
}
SomeClass.prototype[Symbol.iterator] = function() {
var index = 0;
var data = this._data;
return {
next: function() {
return { value: data[++index], done: !(index in data) }
}
};
};
Or using ES6 classes and arrow functions:
class SomeClass {
constructor() {
this._data = [1,2,3,4];
}
[Symbol.iterator]() {
var index = -1;
var data = this._data;
return {
next: () => ({ value: data[++index], done: !(index in data) })
};
};
}
And usage:
var obj = new SomeClass();
for (var i of obj) { console.log(i) }
In your updated question you realized class iterator through generator function. You can do so, but you must understand that iterator COULD NOT BE a generator. Actually iterator in es6 is any object that has specific next()
method