Operator Next (Iteration)

Determines if a For...Next loop should be terminated

Syntax
   { Type | Class | Union } typename
      Declare Operator Next ( [ ByRef | ByVal ] cond As typename ) As 
      Integer
      Declare Operator Next ( [ ByRef | ByVal ] cond As typename, [ ByRef | 
      ByVal ] stp As typename ) As Integer
      ...
   End { Type | Class | Union }

Usage
   For iterator [ As typename ] = start_value To end_value [ Step 
   step_value ]
      [ ...statements... ]
   Next

Parameters
(including arguments)
   typename
      name of the Type, Class, or Union
   cond, end_value
      a typename object used as a loop-terminating value
   stp, step_value
      a typename object used as an incremental value
   iterator
      a typename object used as an iterator
   start_value
      a typename object used to copy construct or assign to the iterator 
      initially

Description
   Operator For, Operator Next and Operator Step can be overloaded in 
   user-defined type definitions to allow objects of that type to be used 
   as iterators and step values in For...Next loops.
   As all non-static member procedures, they have passed a hidden This 
   parameter that allows to access by reference to the iterator object in 
   the code body of the 3 operators.

   Operator Next is called every time the iterator object needs to be 
   checked against the end value. This happens immediately after the call 
   to its Operator For, and immediately after any calls to its Operator Step
   . Operator Next should return zero (0) if the loop should be terminated, 
   or non-zero if the loop should continue iterating. The first time 
   Operator Next is called, no statements in the For...Next body, if any, 
   have been executed yet.

   The first version of Operator Next is used if no step value is given in 
   the For...Next statement. If a step value is given, the second version 
   is used and is passed the step value because testing for iterating end 
   may depend on it.

   Advanced usage
      The above description seems to imply that the 3 arguments start_value
      , end_value, and step_value must be of the same type as the iterator 
      (this is the more obvious use), but it is not quite true:
         - The start_value, end_value, and step_value arguments can be of 
         any type (of different types among themselves and also of 
         different types from the one of the iterator).
         - The only constraint is that the iterator could be constructed 
         (in case of local iterator) or assigned (in case of global 
         iterator) from the start_value argument (because the iterator is 
         implicitly constructed or assigned under the hood).
         - Similarly the other parameters end_value, and step_value must be 
         able to be converted into objects of the same type as the iterator
         .

Example
   See the Operator Step examples.

Dialect Differences
   * Only available in the -lang fb dialect.

See also
   * Operator For
   * Operator Step
   * For...Next

