PEP: 322 Title: Reverse Iteration Version: $Revision$ Last-Modified: $Date$ Author: Raymond Hettinger Status: Final Type: Standards Track Content-Type: text/x-rst Created: 24-Sep-2003 Python-Version: 2.4 Post-History: 24-Sep-2003 Abstract ======== This proposal is to add a builtin function to support reverse iteration over sequences. Motivation ========== For indexable objects, current approaches for reverse iteration are error prone, unnatural, and not especially readable:: for i in xrange(n-1, -1, -1): print seqn[i] One other current approach involves reversing a list before iterating over it. That technique wastes computer cycles, memory, and lines of code:: rseqn = list(seqn) rseqn.reverse() for value in rseqn: print value Extended slicing is a third approach that minimizes the code overhead but does nothing for memory efficiency, beauty, or clarity. Reverse iteration is much less common than forward iteration, but it does arise regularly in practice. See `Real World Use Cases`_ below. Proposal ======== Add a builtin function called *reversed()* that makes a reverse iterator over sequence objects that support __getitem__() and __len__(). The above examples then simplify to:: for i in reversed(xrange(n)): print seqn[i] :: for elem in reversed(seqn): print elem The core idea is that the clearest, least error-prone way of specifying reverse iteration is to specify it in a forward direction and then say *reversed*. The implementation could be as simple as:: def reversed(x): if hasattr(x, 'keys'): raise ValueError("mappings do not support reverse iteration") i = len(x) while i > 0: i -= 1 yield x[i] No language syntax changes are needed. The proposal is fully backwards compatible. A C implementation and unit tests are at: https://bugs.python.org/issue834422 BDFL Pronouncement ================== This PEP has been conditionally accepted for Py2.4. The condition means that if the function is found to be useless, it can be removed before Py2.4b1. Alternative Method Names ======================== * *reviter* -- Jeremy Fincher's suggestion matches use of iter() * *ireverse* -- uses the itertools naming convention * *inreverse* -- no one seems to like this one except me The name *reverse* is not a candidate because it duplicates the name of the list.reverse() which mutates the underlying list. Discussion ========== The case against adoption of the PEP is a desire to keep the number of builtin functions small. This needs to weighed against the simplicity and convenience of having it as builtin instead of being tucked away in some other namespace. Real World Use Cases ==================== Here are some instances of reverse iteration taken from the standard library and comments on why reverse iteration was necessary: * atexit.exit_handlers() uses:: while _exithandlers: func, targs, kargs = _exithandlers.pop() . . . In this application popping is required, so the new function would not help. * heapq.heapify() uses ``for i in xrange(n//2 - 1, -1, -1)`` because higher-level orderings are more easily formed from pairs of lower-level orderings. A forward version of this algorithm is possible; however, that would complicate the rest of the heap code which iterates over the underlying list in the opposite direction. The replacement code ``for i in reversed(xrange(n//2))`` makes clear the range covered and how many iterations it takes. * mhlib.test() uses:: testfolders.reverse(); for t in testfolders: do('mh.deletefolder(%s)' % `t`) The need for reverse iteration arises because the tail of the underlying list is altered during iteration. * platform._dist_try_harder() uses ``for n in range(len(verfiles)-1,-1,-1)`` because the loop deletes selected elements from *verfiles* but needs to leave the rest of the list intact for further iteration. * random.shuffle() uses ``for i in xrange(len(x)-1, 0, -1)`` because the algorithm is most easily understood as randomly selecting elements from an ever diminishing pool. In fact, the algorithm can be run in a forward direction but is less intuitive and rarely presented that way in literature. The replacement code ``for i in reversed(xrange(1, len(x)))`` is much easier to verify visually. * rfc822.Message.__delitem__() uses:: list.reverse() for i in list: del self.headers[i] The need for reverse iteration arises because the tail of the underlying list is altered during iteration. Rejected Alternatives ===================== Several variants were submitted that attempted to apply *reversed()* to all iterables by running the iterable to completion, saving the results, and then returning a reverse iterator over the results. While satisfying some notions of full generality, running the input to the end is contrary to the purpose of using iterators in the first place. Also, a small disaster ensues if the underlying iterator is infinite. Putting the function in another module or attaching it to a type object is not being considered. Like its cousins, *zip()* and *enumerate()*, the function needs to be directly accessible in daily programming. Each solves a basic looping problem: lock-step iteration, loop counting, and reverse iteration. Requiring some form of dotted access would interfere with their simplicity, daily utility, and accessibility. They are core looping constructs, independent of any one application domain. Copyright ========= This document has been placed in the public domain. .. Local Variables: mode: indented-text indent-tabs-mode: nil sentence-end-double-space: t fill-column: 70 End: