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Given an iterator function constructs a Sequence that returns values through the Iterator provided by that function. The values are evaluated lazily, and the sequence is potentially infinite.
import kotlin.test.* fun main() { //sampleStart val array = arrayOf(1, 2, 3) // create a sequence with a function, returning an iterator val sequence1 = Sequence { array.iterator() } println(sequence1.joinToString()) // 1, 2, 3 println(sequence1.drop(1).joinToString()) // 2, 3 // create a sequence from an existing iterator // can be iterated only once val sequence2 = array.iterator().asSequence() println(sequence2.joinToString()) // 1, 2, 3 // sequence2.drop(1).joinToString() // <- iterating sequence second time will fail //sampleEnd }
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val array = arrayOf(1, 2, 3)
// create a sequence with a function, returning an iterator
val sequence1 = Sequence { array.iterator() }
println(sequence1.joinToString()) // 1, 2, 3
println(sequence1.drop(1).joinToString()) // 2, 3
// create a sequence from an existing iterator
// can be iterated only once
val sequence2 = array.iterator().asSequence()
println(sequence2.joinToString()) // 1, 2, 3
// sequence2.drop(1).joinToString() // <- iterating sequence second time will fail
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