Commit Graph

61 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters de9725f135 Make 'x in y' and 'x not in y' (PySequence_Contains) play nice w/ iterators.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES
A few more AttributeErrors turned into TypeErrors, but in test_contains
this time.
The full story for instance objects is pretty much unexplainable, because
instance_contains() tries its own flavor of iteration-based containment
testing first, and PySequence_Contains doesn't get a chance at it unless
instance_contains() blows up.  A consequence is that
    some_complex_number in some_instance
dies with a TypeError unless some_instance.__class__ defines __iter__ but
does not define __getitem__.
2001-05-05 10:06:17 +00:00
Tim Peters 2cfe368283 Make unicode.join() work nice with iterators. This also required a change
to string.join(), so that when the latter figures out in midstream that
it really needs unicode.join() instead, unicode.join() can actually get
all the sequence elements (i.e., there's no guarantee that the sequence
passed to string.join() can be iterated over *again* by unicode.join(),
so string.join() must not pass on the original sequence object anymore).
2001-05-05 05:36:48 +00:00
Tim Peters 6912d4ddf0 Generalize tuple() to work nicely with iterators.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES.
This one surprised me!  While I expected tuple() to be a no-brainer, turns
out it's actually dripping with consequences:
1. It will *allow* the popular PySequence_Fast() to work with any iterable
   object (code for that not yet checked in, but should be trivial).
2. It caused two std tests to fail.  This because some places used
   PyTuple_Sequence() (the C spelling of tuple()) as an indirect way to test
   whether something *is* a sequence.  But tuple() code only looked for the
   existence of sq->item to determine that, and e.g. an instance passed
   that test whether or not it supported the other operations tuple()
   needed (e.g., __len__).  So some things the tests *expected* to fail
   with an AttributeError now fail with a TypeError instead.  This looks
   like an improvement to me; e.g., test_coercion used to produce 559
   TypeErrors and 2 AttributeErrors, and now they're all TypeErrors.  The
   error details are more informative too, because the places calling this
   were *looking* for TypeErrors in order to replace the generic tuple()
   "not a sequence" msg with their own more specific text, and
   AttributeErrors snuck by that.
2001-05-05 03:56:37 +00:00
Tim Peters 15d81efb8a Generalize reduce() to work with iterators.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES.
2001-05-04 04:39:21 +00:00
Tim Peters 8bc10b0c57 Purge redundant cut&paste line. 2001-05-03 23:58:47 +00:00
Tim Peters 4e9afdca39 Generalize map() to work with iterators.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES.
Possibly contentious:  The first time s.next() yields StopIteration (for
a given map argument s) is the last time map() *tries* s.next().  That
is, if other sequence args are longer, s will never again contribute
anything but None values to the result, even if trying s.next() again
could yield another result.  This is the same behavior map() used to have
wrt IndexError, so it's the only way to be wholly backward-compatible.
I'm not a fan of letting StopIteration mean "try again later" anyway.
2001-05-03 23:54:49 +00:00
Tim Peters efdae3939a Remove redundant copy+paste code. 2001-05-03 07:09:25 +00:00
Tim Peters c307453162 Generalize max(seq) and min(seq) to work with iterators.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES.
2001-05-03 07:00:32 +00:00
Tim Peters 0e57abf0cd Generalize filter(f, seq) to work with iterators. This also generalizes
filter() to no longer insist that len(seq) be defined.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES.
2001-05-02 07:39:38 +00:00
Tim Peters f553f89d45 Generalize list(seq) to work with iterators. This also generalizes list()
to no longer insist that len(seq) be defined.
NEEDS DOC CHANGES.
This is meant to be a model for how other functions of this ilk (max,
filter, etc) can be generalized similarly.  Feel encouraged to grab your
favorite and convert it!
Note some cute consequences:
    list(file) == file.readlines() == list(file.xreadlines())
    list(dict) == dict.keys()
    list(dict.iteritems()) = dict.items()
    list(xrange(i, j, k)) == range(i, j, k)
2001-05-01 20:45:31 +00:00
Guido van Rossum 8b48cf9016 Add test suite for iterators. 2001-04-21 13:33:54 +00:00