637 lines
24 KiB
ReStructuredText
637 lines
24 KiB
ReStructuredText
PEP: 479
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Title: Change StopIteration handling inside generators
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com>, Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org>
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Status: Final
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 15-Nov-2014
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Python-Version: 3.5
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Post-History: 15-Nov-2014, 19-Nov-2014, 05-Dec-2014
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Abstract
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========
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This PEP proposes a change to generators: when ``StopIteration`` is
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raised inside a generator, it is replaced with ``RuntimeError``.
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(More precisely, this happens when the exception is about to bubble
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out of the generator's stack frame.) Because the change is backwards
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incompatible, the feature is initially introduced using a
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``__future__`` statement.
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Acceptance
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==========
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This PEP was accepted by the BDFL on November 22. Because of the
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exceptionally short period from first draft to acceptance, the main
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objections brought up after acceptance were carefully considered and
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have been reflected in the "Alternate proposals" section below.
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However, none of the discussion changed the BDFL's mind and the PEP's
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acceptance is now final. (Suggestions for clarifying edits are still
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welcome -- unlike IETF RFCs, the text of a PEP is not cast in stone
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after its acceptance, although the core design/plan/specification
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should not change after acceptance.)
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Rationale
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=========
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The interaction of generators and ``StopIteration`` is currently
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somewhat surprising, and can conceal obscure bugs. An unexpected
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exception should not result in subtly altered behaviour, but should
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cause a noisy and easily-debugged traceback. Currently,
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``StopIteration`` raised accidentally inside a generator function will
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be interpreted as the end of the iteration by the loop construct
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driving the generator.
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The main goal of the proposal is to ease debugging in the situation
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where an unguarded ``next()`` call (perhaps several stack frames deep)
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raises ``StopIteration`` and causes the iteration controlled by the
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generator to terminate silently. (Whereas, when some other exception
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is raised, a traceback is printed pinpointing the cause of the
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problem.)
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This is particularly pernicious in combination with the ``yield from``
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construct of :pep:`380`, as it breaks the abstraction that a
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subgenerator may be factored out of a generator. That PEP notes this
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limitation, but notes that "use cases for these [are] rare to
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non-existent". Unfortunately while intentional use is rare, it is
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easy to stumble on these cases by accident::
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import contextlib
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@contextlib.contextmanager
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def transaction():
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print('begin')
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try:
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yield from do_it()
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except:
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print('rollback')
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raise
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else:
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print('commit')
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def do_it():
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print('Refactored initial setup')
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yield # Body of with-statement is executed here
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print('Refactored finalization of successful transaction')
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def gene():
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for i in range(2):
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with transaction():
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yield i
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# return
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raise StopIteration # This is wrong
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print('Should not be reached')
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for i in gene():
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print('main: i =', i)
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Here factoring out ``do_it`` into a subgenerator has introduced a
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subtle bug: if the wrapped block raises ``StopIteration``, under the
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current behavior this exception will be swallowed by the context
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manager; and, worse, the finalization is silently skipped! Similarly
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problematic behavior occurs when an ``asyncio`` coroutine raises
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``StopIteration``, causing it to terminate silently, or when ``next``
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is used to take the first result from an iterator that unexpectedly
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turns out to be empty, for example::
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# using the same context manager as above
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import pathlib
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with transaction():
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print('commit file {}'.format(
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# I can never remember what the README extension is
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next(pathlib.Path('/some/dir').glob('README*'))))
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In both cases, the refactoring abstraction of ``yield from`` breaks
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in the presence of bugs in client code.
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Additionally, the proposal reduces the difference between list
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comprehensions and generator expressions, preventing surprises such as
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the one that started this discussion [2]_. Henceforth, the following
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statements will produce the same result if either produces a result at
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all::
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a = list(F(x) for x in xs if P(x))
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a = [F(x) for x in xs if P(x)]
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With the current state of affairs, it is possible to write a function
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``F(x)`` or a predicate ``P(x)`` that causes the first form to produce
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a (truncated) result, while the second form raises an exception
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(namely, ``StopIteration``). With the proposed change, both forms
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will raise an exception at this point (albeit ``RuntimeError`` in the
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first case and ``StopIteration`` in the second).
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Finally, the proposal also clears up the confusion about how to
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terminate a generator: the proper way is ``return``, not
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``raise StopIteration``.
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As an added bonus, the above changes bring generator functions much
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more in line with regular functions. If you wish to take a piece of
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code presented as a generator and turn it into something else, you
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can usually do this fairly simply, by replacing every ``yield`` with
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a call to ``print()`` or ``list.append()``; however, if there are any
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bare ``next()`` calls in the code, you have to be aware of them. If
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the code was originally written without relying on ``StopIteration``
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terminating the function, the transformation would be that much
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easier.
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Background information
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======================
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When a generator frame is (re)started as a result of a ``__next__()``
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(or ``send()`` or ``throw()``) call, one of three outcomes can occur:
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* A yield point is reached, and the yielded value is returned.
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* The frame is returned from; ``StopIteration`` is raised.
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* An exception is raised, which bubbles out.
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In the latter two cases the frame is abandoned (and the generator
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object's ``gi_frame`` attribute is set to None).
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Proposal
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========
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If a ``StopIteration`` is about to bubble out of a generator frame, it
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is replaced with ``RuntimeError``, which causes the ``next()`` call
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(which invoked the generator) to fail, passing that exception out.
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From then on it's just like any old exception. [3]_
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This affects the third outcome listed above, without altering any
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other effects. Furthermore, it only affects this outcome when the
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exception raised is ``StopIteration`` (or a subclass thereof).
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Note that the proposed replacement happens at the point where the
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exception is about to bubble out of the frame, i.e. after any
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``except`` or ``finally`` blocks that could affect it have been
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exited. The ``StopIteration`` raised by returning from the frame is
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not affected (the point being that ``StopIteration`` means that the
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generator terminated "normally", i.e. it did not raise an exception).
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A subtle issue is what will happen if the caller, having caught the
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``RuntimeError``, calls the generator object's ``__next__()`` method
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again. The answer is that from this point on it will raise
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``StopIteration`` -- the behavior is the same as when any other
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exception was raised by the generator.
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Another logical consequence of the proposal: if someone uses
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``g.throw(StopIteration)`` to throw a ``StopIteration`` exception into
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a generator, if the generator doesn't catch it (which it could do
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using a ``try/except`` around the ``yield``), it will be transformed
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into ``RuntimeError``.
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During the transition phase, the new feature must be enabled
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per-module using::
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from __future__ import generator_stop
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Any generator function constructed under the influence of this
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directive will have the ``REPLACE_STOPITERATION`` flag set on its code
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object, and generators with the flag set will behave according to this
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proposal. Once the feature becomes standard, the flag may be dropped;
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code should not inspect generators for it.
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A proof-of-concept patch has been created to facilitate testing. [4]_
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Consequences for existing code
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==============================
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This change will affect existing code that depends on
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``StopIteration`` bubbling up. The pure Python reference
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implementation of ``groupby`` [5]_ currently has comments "Exit on
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``StopIteration``" where it is expected that the exception will
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propagate and then be handled. This will be unusual, but not unknown,
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and such constructs will fail. Other examples abound, e.g. [6]_, [7]_.
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(Alyssa Coghlan comments: """If you wanted to factor out a helper
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function that terminated the generator you'd have to do "return
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yield from helper()" rather than just "helper()".""")
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There are also examples of generator expressions floating around that
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rely on a ``StopIteration`` raised by the expression, the target or the
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predicate (rather than by the ``__next__()`` call implied in the ``for``
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loop proper).
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Writing backwards and forwards compatible code
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----------------------------------------------
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With the exception of hacks that raise ``StopIteration`` to exit a
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generator expression, it is easy to write code that works equally well
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under older Python versions as under the new semantics.
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This is done by enclosing those places in the generator body where a
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``StopIteration`` is expected (e.g. bare ``next()`` calls or in some
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cases helper functions that are expected to raise ``StopIteration``)
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in a ``try/except`` construct that returns when ``StopIteration`` is
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raised. The ``try/except`` construct should appear directly in the
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generator function; doing this in a helper function that is not itself
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a generator does not work. If ``raise StopIteration`` occurs directly
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in a generator, simply replace it with ``return``.
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Examples of breakage
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--------------------
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Generators which explicitly raise ``StopIteration`` can generally be
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changed to simply return instead. This will be compatible with all
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existing Python versions, and will not be affected by ``__future__``.
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Here are some illustrations from the standard library.
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Lib/ipaddress.py::
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if other == self:
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raise StopIteration
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Becomes::
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if other == self:
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return
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In some cases, this can be combined with ``yield from`` to simplify
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the code, such as Lib/difflib.py::
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if context is None:
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while True:
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yield next(line_pair_iterator)
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Becomes::
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if context is None:
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yield from line_pair_iterator
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return
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(The ``return`` is necessary for a strictly-equivalent translation,
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though in this particular file, there is no further code, and the
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``return`` can be omitted.) For compatibility with pre-3.3 versions
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of Python, this could be written with an explicit ``for`` loop::
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if context is None:
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for line in line_pair_iterator:
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yield line
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return
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More complicated iteration patterns will need explicit ``try/except``
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constructs. For example, a hypothetical parser like this::
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def parser(f):
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while True:
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data = next(f)
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while True:
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line = next(f)
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if line == "- end -": break
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data += line
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yield data
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would need to be rewritten as::
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def parser(f):
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while True:
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try:
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data = next(f)
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while True:
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line = next(f)
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if line == "- end -": break
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data += line
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yield data
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except StopIteration:
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return
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or possibly::
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def parser(f):
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for data in f:
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while True:
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line = next(f)
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if line == "- end -": break
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data += line
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yield data
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The latter form obscures the iteration by purporting to iterate over
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the file with a ``for`` loop, but then also fetches more data from
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the same iterator during the loop body. It does, however, clearly
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differentiate between a "normal" termination (``StopIteration``
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instead of the initial line) and an "abnormal" termination (failing
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to find the end marker in the inner loop, which will now raise
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``RuntimeError``).
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This effect of ``StopIteration`` has been used to cut a generator
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expression short, creating a form of ``takewhile``::
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def stop():
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raise StopIteration
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print(list(x for x in range(10) if x < 5 or stop()))
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# prints [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
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Under the current proposal, this form of non-local flow control is
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not supported, and would have to be rewritten in statement form::
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def gen():
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for x in range(10):
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if x >= 5: return
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yield x
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print(list(gen()))
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# prints [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
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While this is a small loss of functionality, it is functionality that
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often comes at the cost of readability, and just as ``lambda`` has
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restrictions compared to ``def``, so does a generator expression have
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restrictions compared to a generator function. In many cases, the
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transformation to full generator function will be trivially easy, and
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may improve structural clarity.
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Explanation of generators, iterators, and StopIteration
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=======================================================
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The proposal does not change the relationship between generators and
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iterators: a generator object is still an iterator, and not all
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iterators are generators. Generators have additional methods that
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iterators don't have, like ``send`` and ``throw``. All this is
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unchanged. Nothing changes for generator users -- only authors of
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generator functions may have to learn something new. (This includes
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authors of generator expressions that depend on early termination of
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the iteration by a ``StopIteration`` raised in a condition.)
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An iterator is an object with a ``__next__`` method. Like many other
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special methods, it may either return a value, or raise a specific
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exception - in this case, ``StopIteration`` - to signal that it has
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no value to return. In this, it is similar to ``__getattr__`` (can
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raise ``AttributeError``), ``__getitem__`` (can raise ``KeyError``),
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and so on. A helper function for an iterator can be written to
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follow the same protocol; for example::
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def helper(x, y):
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if x > y: return 1 / (x - y)
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raise StopIteration
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def __next__(self):
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if self.a: return helper(self.b, self.c)
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return helper(self.d, self.e)
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Both forms of signalling are carried through: a returned value is
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returned, an exception bubbles up. The helper is written to match
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the protocol of the calling function.
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A generator function is one which contains a ``yield`` expression.
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Each time it is (re)started, it may either yield a value, or return
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(including "falling off the end"). A helper function for a generator
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can also be written, but it must also follow generator protocol::
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def helper(x, y):
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if x > y: yield 1 / (x - y)
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def gen(self):
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if self.a: return (yield from helper(self.b, self.c))
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return (yield from helper(self.d, self.e))
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In both cases, any unexpected exception will bubble up. Due to the
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nature of generators and iterators, an unexpected ``StopIteration``
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inside a generator will be converted into ``RuntimeError``, but
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beyond that, all exceptions will propagate normally.
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Transition plan
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===============
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- Python 3.5: Enable new semantics under ``__future__`` import; silent
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deprecation warning if ``StopIteration`` bubbles out of a generator
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not under ``__future__`` import.
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- Python 3.6: Non-silent deprecation warning.
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- Python 3.7: Enable new semantics everywhere.
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Alternate proposals
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===================
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Raising something other than RuntimeError
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-----------------------------------------
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Rather than the generic ``RuntimeError``, it might make sense to raise
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a new exception type ``UnexpectedStopIteration``. This has the
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downside of implicitly encouraging that it be caught; the correct
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action is to catch the original ``StopIteration``, not the chained
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exception.
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Supplying a specific exception to raise on return
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-------------------------------------------------
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Alyssa (Nick) Coghlan suggested a means of providing a specific
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``StopIteration`` instance to the generator; if any other instance of
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``StopIteration`` is raised, it is an error, but if that particular
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one is raised, the generator has properly completed. This subproposal
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has been withdrawn in favour of better options, but is retained for
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reference.
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Making return-triggered StopIterations obvious
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----------------------------------------------
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For certain situations, a simpler and fully backward-compatible
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solution may be sufficient: when a generator returns, instead of
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raising ``StopIteration``, it raises a specific subclass of
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``StopIteration`` (``GeneratorReturn``) which can then be detected.
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If it is not that subclass, it is an escaping exception rather than a
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return statement.
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The inspiration for this alternative proposal was Alyssa's observation
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[8]_ that if an ``asyncio`` coroutine [9]_ accidentally raises
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``StopIteration``, it currently terminates silently, which may present
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a hard-to-debug mystery to the developer. The main proposal turns
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such accidents into clearly distinguishable ``RuntimeError`` exceptions,
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but if that is rejected, this alternate proposal would enable
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``asyncio`` to distinguish between a ``return`` statement and an
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accidentally-raised ``StopIteration`` exception.
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Of the three outcomes listed above, two change:
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* If a yield point is reached, the value, obviously, would still be
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returned.
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* If the frame is returned from, ``GeneratorReturn`` (rather than
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``StopIteration``) is raised.
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* If an instance of ``GeneratorReturn`` would be raised, instead an
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instance of ``StopIteration`` would be raised. Any other exception
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bubbles up normally.
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In the third case, the ``StopIteration`` would have the ``value`` of
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the original ``GeneratorReturn``, and would reference the original
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exception in its ``__cause__``. If uncaught, this would clearly show
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the chaining of exceptions.
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This alternative does *not* affect the discrepancy between generator
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expressions and list comprehensions, but allows generator-aware code
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(such as the ``contextlib`` and ``asyncio`` modules) to reliably
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differentiate between the second and third outcomes listed above.
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However, once code exists that depends on this distinction between
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``GeneratorReturn`` and ``StopIteration``, a generator that invokes
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another generator and relies on the latter's ``StopIteration`` to
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bubble out would still be potentially wrong, depending on the use made
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of the distinction between the two exception types.
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Converting the exception inside next()
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--------------------------------------
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Mark Shannon suggested [10]_ that the problem could be solved in
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``next()`` rather than at the boundary of generator functions. By
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having ``next()`` catch ``StopIteration`` and raise instead
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``ValueError``, all unexpected ``StopIteration`` bubbling would be
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prevented; however, the backward-incompatibility concerns are far
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more serious than for the current proposal, as every ``next()`` call
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now needs to be rewritten to guard against ``ValueError`` instead of
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``StopIteration`` - not to mention that there is no way to write one
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block of code which reliably works on multiple versions of Python.
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(Using a dedicated exception type, perhaps subclassing ``ValueError``,
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would help this; however, all code would still need to be rewritten.)
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Note that calling ``next(it, default)`` catches ``StopIteration`` and
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substitutes the given default value; this feature is often useful to
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avoid a ``try/except`` block.
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Sub-proposal: decorator to explicitly request current behaviour
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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Alyssa Coghlan suggested [11]_ that the situations where the current
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behaviour is desired could be supported by means of a decorator::
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from itertools import allow_implicit_stop
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@allow_implicit_stop
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def my_generator():
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...
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yield next(it)
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...
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Which would be semantically equivalent to::
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def my_generator():
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try:
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...
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yield next(it)
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...
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except StopIteration
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return
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||
|
||
but be faster, as it could be implemented by simply permitting the
|
||
``StopIteration`` to bubble up directly.
|
||
|
||
Single-source Python 2/3 code would also benefit in a 3.7+ world,
|
||
since libraries like six and python-future could just define their own
|
||
version of "allow_implicit_stop" that referred to the new builtin in
|
||
3.5+, and was implemented as an identity function in other versions.
|
||
|
||
However, due to the implementation complexities required, the ongoing
|
||
compatibility issues created, the subtlety of the decorator's effect,
|
||
and the fact that it would encourage the "quick-fix" solution of just
|
||
slapping the decorator onto all generators instead of properly fixing
|
||
the code in question, this sub-proposal has been rejected. [12]_
|
||
|
||
|
||
Criticism
|
||
=========
|
||
|
||
Unofficial and apocryphal statistics suggest that this is seldom, if
|
||
ever, a problem. [13]_ Code does exist which relies on the current
|
||
behaviour (e.g. [3]_, [6]_, [7]_), and there is the concern that this
|
||
would be unnecessary code churn to achieve little or no gain.
|
||
|
||
Steven D'Aprano started an informal survey on comp.lang.python [14]_;
|
||
at the time of writing only two responses have been received: one was
|
||
in favor of changing list comprehensions to match generator
|
||
expressions (!), the other was in favor of this PEP's main proposal.
|
||
|
||
The existing model has been compared to the perfectly-acceptable
|
||
issues inherent to every other case where an exception has special
|
||
meaning. For instance, an unexpected ``KeyError`` inside a
|
||
``__getitem__`` method will be interpreted as failure, rather than
|
||
permitted to bubble up. However, there is a difference. Special
|
||
methods use ``return`` to indicate normality, and ``raise`` to signal
|
||
abnormality; generators ``yield`` to indicate data, and ``return`` to
|
||
signal the abnormal state. This makes explicitly raising
|
||
``StopIteration`` entirely redundant, and potentially surprising. If
|
||
other special methods had dedicated keywords to distinguish between
|
||
their return paths, they too could turn unexpected exceptions into
|
||
``RuntimeError``; the fact that they cannot should not preclude
|
||
generators from doing so.
|
||
|
||
Why not fix all __next__() methods?
|
||
-----------------------------------
|
||
|
||
When implementing a regular ``__next__()`` method, the only way to
|
||
indicate the end of the iteration is to raise ``StopIteration``. So
|
||
catching ``StopIteration`` here and converting it to ``RuntimeError``
|
||
would defeat the purpose. This is a reminder of the special status of
|
||
generator functions: in a generator function, raising
|
||
``StopIteration`` is redundant since the iteration can be terminated
|
||
by a simple ``return``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
References
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
.. [2] Initial mailing list comment
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-November/029906.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [3] Proposal by GvR
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-November/029953.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [4] Tracker issue with Proof-of-Concept patch
|
||
(http://bugs.python.org/issue22906)
|
||
|
||
.. [5] Pure Python implementation of groupby
|
||
(https://docs.python.org/3/library/itertools.html#itertools.groupby)
|
||
|
||
.. [6] Split a sequence or generator using a predicate
|
||
(http://code.activestate.com/recipes/578416-split-a-sequence-or-generator-using-a-predicate/)
|
||
|
||
.. [7] wrap unbounded generator to restrict its output
|
||
(http://code.activestate.com/recipes/66427-wrap-unbounded-generator-to-restrict-its-output/)
|
||
|
||
.. [8] Post from Alyssa (Nick) Coghlan mentioning asyncio
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-November/029961.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [9] Coroutines in asyncio
|
||
(https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio-task.html#coroutines)
|
||
|
||
.. [10] Post from Mark Shannon with alternate proposal
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2014-November/137129.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [11] Idea from Alyssa Coghlan
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2014-November/137201.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [12] Rejection of above idea by GvR
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2014-November/137243.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [13] Response by Steven D'Aprano
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-November/029994.html)
|
||
|
||
.. [14] Thread on comp.lang.python started by Steven D'Aprano
|
||
(https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-list/2014-November/680757.html)
|
||
|
||
Copyright
|
||
=========
|
||
|
||
This document has been placed in the public domain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
..
|
||
Local Variables:
|
||
mode: indented-text
|
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
|
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coding: utf-8
|
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End:
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