# iterNegativeOddIntegersSeq > Create an iterator which generates a sequence of negative odd integers.
## Usage ```javascript var iterNegativeOddIntegersSeq = require( '@stdlib/math/iter/sequences/negative-odd-integers' ); ``` #### iterNegativeOddIntegersSeq( \[options] ) Returns an iterator which generates a sequence of negative odd integers. ```javascript var it = iterNegativeOddIntegersSeq(); // returns var v = it.next().value; // returns -1 v = it.next().value; // returns -3 v = it.next().value; // returns -5 // ... ``` The returned iterator protocol-compliant object has the following properties: - **next**: function which returns an iterator protocol-compliant object containing the next iterated value (if one exists) assigned to a `value` property and a `done` property having a `boolean` value indicating whether the iterator is finished. - **return**: function which closes an iterator and returns a single (optional) argument in an iterator protocol-compliant object. The function supports the following `options`: - **iter**: number of iterations. Default: `4503599627370496`. By default, the function returns a finite iterator to avoid exceeding the maximum safe double-precision floating-point integer. To adjust the number of iterations, set the `iter` option. ```javascript var opts = { 'iter': 2 }; var it = iterNegativeOddIntegersSeq( opts ); // returns var v = it.next().value; // returns -1 v = it.next().value; // returns -3 var bool = it.next().done; // returns true ```
## Notes - If an environment supports `Symbol.iterator`, the returned iterator is iterable.
## Examples ```javascript var iterNegativeOddIntegersSeq = require( '@stdlib/math/iter/sequences/negative-odd-integers' ); // Create an iterator: var opts = { 'iter': 100 }; var it = iterNegativeOddIntegersSeq( opts ); // Perform manual iteration... var v; while ( true ) { v = it.next(); if ( v.done ) { break; } console.log( v.value ); } ```