280 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
280 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 255
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Title: Simple Generators
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Version: $Revision$
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Author: nas@python.ca (Neil Schemenauer),
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tim.one@home.com (Tim Peters),
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magnus@hetland.org (Magnus Lie Hetland)
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Discussion-To: python-iterators@lists.sourceforge.net
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards Track
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Requires: 234
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Created: 18-May-2001
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Python-Version: 2.2
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Post-History: 14-Jun-2001
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Abstract
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This PEP introduces the concept of generators to Python, as well
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as a new statement used in conjunction with them, the "yield"
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statement.
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Motivation
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When a producer function has a hard enough job that it requires
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maintaining state between values produced, most programming languages
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offer no pleasant and efficient solution beyond adding a callback
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function to the producer's argument list, to be called with each value
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produced.
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For example, tokenize.py in the standard library takes this approach:
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the caller must pass a "tokeneater" function to tokenize(), called
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whenever tokenize() finds the next token. This allows tokenize to be
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coded in a natural way, but programs calling tokenize are typically
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convoluted by the need to remember between callbacks which token(s)
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were seen last. The tokeneater function in tabnanny.py is a good
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example of that, maintaining a state machine in global variables, to
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remember across callbacks what it has already seen and what it hopes to
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see next. This was difficult to get working correctly, and is still
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difficult for people to understand. Unfortunately, that's typical of
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this approach.
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An alternative would have been for tokenize to produce an entire parse
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of the Python program at once, in a large list. Then tokenize clients
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could be written in a natural way, using local variables and local
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control flow (such as loops and nested if statements) to keep track of
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their state. But this isn't practical: programs can be very large, so
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no a priori bound can be placed on the memory needed to materialize the
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whole parse; and some tokenize clients only want to see whether
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something specific appears early in the program (e.g., a future
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statement, or, as is done in IDLE, just the first indented statement),
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and then parsing the whole program first is a severe waste of time.
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Another alternative would be to make tokenize an iterator[1],
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delivering the next token whenever its .next() method is invoked. This
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is pleasant for the caller in the same way a large list of results
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would be, but without the memory and "what if I want to get out early?"
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drawbacks. However, this shifts the burden on tokenize to remember
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*its* state between .next() invocations, and the reader need only
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glance at tokenize.tokenize_loop() to realize what a horrid chore that
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would be. Or picture a recursive algorithm for producing the nodes of
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a general tree structure: to cast that into an iterator framework
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requires removing the recursion manually and maintaining the state of
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the traversal by hand.
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A fourth option is to run the producer and consumer in separate
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threads. This allows both to maintain their states in natural ways,
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and so is pleasant for both. Indeed, Demo/threads/Generator.py in the
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Python source distribution provides a usable synchronized-communication
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class for doing that in a general way. This doesn't work on platforms
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without threads, though, and is very slow on platforms that do
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(compared to what is achievable without threads).
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A final option is to use the Stackless[2][3] variant implementation of
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Python instead, which supports lightweight coroutines. This has much
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the same programmatic benefits as the thread option, but is much more
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efficient. However, Stackless is a controversial rethinking of the
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Python core, and it may not be possible for Jython to implement the
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same semantics. This PEP isn't the place to debate that, so suffice it
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to say here that generators provide a useful subset of Stackless
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functionality in a way that fits easily into the current CPython
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implementation, and is believed to be relatively straightforward for
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other Python implementations.
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That exhausts the current alternatives. Some other high-level
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languages provide pleasant solutions, notably iterators in Sather[4],
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which were inspired by iterators in CLU; and generators in Icon[5], a
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novel language where every expression "is a generator". There are
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differences among these, but the basic idea is the same: provide a
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kind of function that can return an intermediate result ("the next
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value") to its caller, but maintaining the function's local state so
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that the function can be resumed again right where it left off. A
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very simple example:
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def fib():
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a, b = 0, 1
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while 1:
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yield b
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a, b = b, a+b
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When fib() is first invoked, it sets a to 0 and b to 1, then yields b
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back to its caller. The caller sees 1. When fib is resumed, from its
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point of view the yield statement is really the same as, say, a print
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statement: fib continues after the yield with all local state intact.
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a and b then become 1 and 1, and fib loops back to the yield, yielding
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1 to its invoker. And so on. From fib's point of view it's just
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delivering a sequence of results, as if via callback. But from its
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caller's point of view, the fib invocation is an iterable object that
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can be resumed at will. As in the thread approach, this allows both
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sides to be coded in the most natural ways; but unlike the thread
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approach, this can be done efficiently and on all platforms. Indeed,
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resuming a generator should be no more expensive than a function call.
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The same kind of approach applies to many producer/consumer functions.
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For example, tokenize.py could yield the next token instead of invoking
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a callback function with it as argument, and tokenize clients could
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iterate over the tokens in a natural way: a Python generator is a kind
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of Python iterator[1], but of an especially powerful kind.
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Specification
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A new statement is introduced:
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yield_stmt: "yield" expression_list
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"yield" is a new keyword, so a future statement[8] is needed to phase
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this in. [XXX spell this out]
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The yield statement may only be used inside functions. A function that
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contains a yield statement is called a generator function.
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When a generator function is called, the actual arguments are bound to
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function-local formal argument names in the usual way, but no code in
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the body of the function is executed. Instead a generator-iterator
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object is returned; this conforms to the iterator protocol[6], so in
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particular can be used in for-loops in a natural way. Note that when
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the intent is clear from context, the unqualified name "generator" may
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be used to refer either to a generator-function or a generator-
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iterator.
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Each time the .next() method of a generator-iterator is invoked, the
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code in the body of the generator-function is executed until a yield
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or return statement (see below) is encountered, or until the end of
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the body is reached.
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If a yield statement is encountered, the state of the function is
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frozen, and the value of expression_list is returned to .next()'s
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caller. By "frozen" we mean that all local state is retained,
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including the current bindings of local variables, the instruction
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pointer, and the internal evaluation stack: enough information is
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saved so that the next time .next() is invoked, the function can
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proceed exactly as if the yield statement were just another external
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call.
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A generator function can also contain return statements of the form:
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"return"
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Note that an expression_list is not allowed on return statements
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in the body of a generator (although, of course, they may appear in
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the bodies of non-generator functions nested within the generator).
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When a return statement is encountered, nothing is returned, but a
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StopIteration exception is raised, signalling that the iterator is
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exhausted. The same is true if control flows off the end of the
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function. Note that return means "I'm done, and have nothing
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interesting to return", for both generator functions and non-generator
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functions.
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Example
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# A binary tree class.
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class Tree:
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def __init__(self, label, left=None, right=None):
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self.label = label
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self.left = left
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self.right = right
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def __repr__(self, level=0, indent=" "):
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s = level*indent + `self.label`
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if self.left:
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s = s + "\n" + self.left.__repr__(level+1, indent)
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if self.right:
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s = s + "\n" + self.right.__repr__(level+1, indent)
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return s
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def __iter__(self):
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return inorder(self)
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# Create a Tree from a list.
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def tree(list):
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n = len(list)
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if n == 0:
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return []
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i = n / 2
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return Tree(list[i], tree(list[:i]), tree(list[i+1:]))
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# A recursive generator that generates Tree leaves in in-order.
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def inorder(t):
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if t:
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for x in inorder(t.left):
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yield x
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yield t.label
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for x in inorder(t.right):
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yield x
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# Show it off: create a tree.
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t = tree("ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ")
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# Print the nodes of the tree in in-order.
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for x in t:
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print x,
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print
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# A non-recursive generator.
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def inorder(node):
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stack = []
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while node:
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while node.left:
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stack.append(node)
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node = node.left
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yield node.label
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while not node.right:
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try:
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node = stack.pop()
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except IndexError:
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return
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yield node.label
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node = node.right
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# Exercise the non-recursive generator.
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for x in t:
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print x,
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print
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Q & A
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Q. Why a new keyword? Why not a builtin function instead?
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A. Control flow is much better expressed via keyword in Python, and
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yield is a control construct. It's also believed that efficient
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implementation in Jython requires that the compiler be able to
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determine potential suspension points at compile-time, and a new
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keyword makes that easy.
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Reference Implementation
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A preliminary patch against the CVS Python source is available[7].
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Footnotes and References
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[1] PEP 234, http://python.sf.net/peps/pep-0234.html
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[2] http://www.stackless.com/
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[3] PEP 219, http://python.sf.net/peps/pep-0219.html
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[4] "Iteration Abstraction in Sather"
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Murer , Omohundro, Stoutamire and Szyperski
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http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~sather/Publications/toplas.html
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[5] http://www.cs.arizona.edu/icon/
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[6] The concept of iterators is described in PEP 234
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http://python.sf.net/peps/pep-0234.html
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[7] http://python.ca/nas/python/generator.diff
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[8] http://python.sf.net/peps/pep-0236.html
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Copyright
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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End:
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