/* AbstractSequentialList.java -- List implementation for sequential access
Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Classpath.
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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02110-1301 USA.
Linking this library statically or dynamically with other modules is
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As a special exception, the copyright holders of this library give you
permission to link this library with independent modules to produce an
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independent module, the terms and conditions of the license of that
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package java.util;
/**
* Abstract superclass to make it easier to implement the List interface when
* backed by a sequential-access store, such as a linked list. For random
* access data, use AbstractList. This class implements the random access
* methods (get
, set
, add
, and
* remove
) atop the list iterator, opposite of AbstractList's
* approach of implementing the iterator atop random access.
*
*
* To implement a list, you need an implementation for size()
* and listIterator
. With just hasNext
,
* next
, hasPrevious
, previous
,
* nextIndex
, and previousIndex
, you have an
* unmodifiable list. For a modifiable one, add set
, and for
* a variable-size list, add add
and remove
.
*
*
* The programmer should provide a no-argument constructor, and one that
* accepts another Collection, as recommended by the Collection interface.
* Unfortunately, there is no way to enforce this in Java.
*
* @author Original author unknown
* @author Bryce McKinlay
* @author Eric Blake (ebb9@email.byu.edu)
* @see Collection
* @see List
* @see AbstractList
* @see AbstractCollection
* @see ListIterator
* @see LinkedList
* @since 1.2
* @status updated to 1.4
*/
public abstract class AbstractSequentialList
*
* This implementation grabs listIterator(index), then proceeds to use add
* for each element returned by c's iterator. Sun's online specs are wrong,
* claiming that this also calls next(): listIterator.add() correctly
* skips the added element.
*
* @param index the location to insert the collection
* @param c the collection to insert
* @return true if the list was modified by this action, that is, if c is
* non-empty
* @throws UnsupportedOperationException if this list does not support the
* addAll operation
* @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException if index < 0 || index > size()
* @throws ClassCastException if some element of c cannot be added to this
* list due to its type
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if some element of c cannot be added
* to this list for some other reason
* @throws NullPointerException if the specified collection is null
* @throws NullPointerException if an object, o, in c is null and the list
* does not permit the addition of null values.
* @see #add(int, Object)
*/
public boolean addAll(int index, Collection extends E> c)
{
Iterator extends E> ci = c.iterator();
int size = c.size();
ListIterator