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Groups > comp.lang.python > #26505

Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not

Date 2012-08-04 15:24 -0500
From Tim Chase <python.list@tim.thechases.com>
Subject Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not
References <franck-DC86E6.21203604082012@news.free.fr>
Newsgroups comp.lang.python
Message-ID <mailman.2948.1344111770.4697.python-list@python.org> (permalink)

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On 08/04/12 14:20, Franck Ditter wrote:
> Two similar iterable objects but with a different behavior :
> 
> $$$ i = range(2,5)
> $$$ for x in i : print(x,end=' ')
> 
> 2 3 4 
> $$$ for x in i : print(x,end=' ')        # i is not exhausted   
> 
> 2 3 4 
> 
> --------- Compare with :
> 
> $$$ i = filter(lambda c : c.isdigit(), 'a1b2c3')
> $$$ for x in i : print(x,end=' ')
> 
> 1 2 3 
> $$$ for x in i : print(x,end=' ')        # i is exhausted
> 
> $$$ 
> 
> IMHO, this should not happen in Py3k.
> What is the rationale of this (bad ?) design, which forces the programmer
> to memorize which one is exhaustable and which one is not ?...

I can't speak to the rationale, but it seems that a range() object
has some extra features that a normal iter doesn't:

  >>> i = iter(range(2,5))
  >>> for x in i: print (x, end=' ')
  ...
  2 3 4 >>> for x in i: print (x, end=' ')
  ...

(your 2nd behavior, and what I'd expect).

So my guess would be that the "for {var} in {thing}" triggers a
re-calling of range.__iter__ since it's not an iterator to begin with.

-tkc


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Thread

when an iterable object is exhausted or not Franck Ditter <franck@ditter.org> - 2012-08-04 21:20 +0200
  Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not Tim Roberts <timr@probo.com> - 2012-08-04 12:44 -0700
    Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2012-08-05 00:47 +0000
  Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> - 2012-08-04 21:11 +0100
  Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not Tim Chase <python.list@tim.thechases.com> - 2012-08-04 15:24 -0500
  Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not Terry Reedy <tjreedy@udel.edu> - 2012-08-04 17:04 -0400
  Re: when an iterable object is exhausted or not Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python@pearwood.info> - 2012-08-05 02:13 +0000

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