Files
AutoGPT/docs/platform/blocks/iteration.md
Nicholas Tindle a318832414 feat(docs): update dev from gitbook changes (#11740)
<!-- Clearly explain the need for these changes: -->
gitbook branch has changes that need synced to dev
### Changes 🏗️
Pull changes from gitbook into dev
<!-- Concisely describe all of the changes made in this pull request:
-->

<!-- CURSOR_SUMMARY -->
---

> [!NOTE]
> Migrates documentation to GitBook and removes the old MkDocs setup.
> 
> - Removes MkDocs configuration and infra: `docs/mkdocs.yml`,
`docs/netlify.toml`, `docs/overrides/main.html`,
`docs/requirements.txt`, and JS assets (`_javascript/mathjax.js`,
`_javascript/tablesort.js`)
> - Updates `docs/content/contribute/index.md` to describe GitBook
workflow (gitbook branch, editing, previews, and `SUMMARY.md`)
> - Adds GitBook navigation file `docs/platform/SUMMARY.md` and a new
platform overview page `docs/platform/what-is-autogpt-platform.md`
> 
> <sup>Written by [Cursor
Bugbot](https://cursor.com/dashboard?tab=bugbot) for commit
e7e118b5a8. This will update automatically
on new commits. Configure
[here](https://cursor.com/dashboard?tab=bugbot).</sup>
<!-- /CURSOR_SUMMARY -->

<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->

## Summary by CodeRabbit

* **Documentation**
* Updated contribution guide for new documentation platform and workflow
  * Added new platform overview and navigation documentation

* **Chores**
  * Removed MkDocs configuration and related dependencies
  * Removed deprecated JavaScript integrations and deployment overrides

<sub>✏️ Tip: You can customize this high-level summary in your review
settings.</sub>

<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-01-09 19:22:05 +00:00

1.3 KiB

Step Through Items

What it is

A block that iterates through a list or dictionary, processing each item one by one.

What it does

This block takes a list or dictionary as input and goes through each item, outputting the current item and its corresponding key or index.

How it works

When given a list or dictionary, the block processes each item individually. For lists, it keeps track of the item's position (index). For dictionaries, it focuses on the values, using the value as both the item and the key in the output.

Inputs

Input Description
Items A list or dictionary that you want to process item by item. For example, you could input a list of numbers [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] or a dictionary of key-value pairs {'key1': 'value1', 'key2': 'value2'}

Outputs

Output Description
Item The current item being processed from the input list or dictionary
Key For lists, this is the index (position) of the current item. For dictionaries, this is the same as the item (the dictionary's value)

Possible use case

Imagine you have a list of customer names and you want to perform a specific action for each customer, like sending a personalized email. This block could help you go through the list one by one, allowing you to process each customer individually.