Commit Graph

65 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Tim Peters c468fd28b6 Derive an industrial-strength conjoin() via cross-recursion loop unrolling,
and fiddle the conjoin tests to exercise all the new possible paths.
2001-06-30 07:29:44 +00:00
Tim Peters be4f0a7748 Added a simple but general backtracking generator (conjoin), and a couple
examples of use.  These poke stuff not specifically targeted before, incl.
recursive local generators relying on nested scopes, ditto but also
inside class methods and rebinding instance vars, and anonymous
partially-evaluated generators (the N-Queens solver creates a different
column-generator for each row -- AFAIK this is my invention, and it's
really pretty <wink>).  No problems, not even a new leak.
2001-06-29 02:41:16 +00:00
Tim Peters 08a898f85d Another "if 0:" hack, this time to complain about otherwise invisible
"return expr" instances in generators (which latter may be generators
due to otherwise invisible "yield" stmts hiding in "if 0" blocks).
This was fun the first time, but this has gotten truly ugly now.
2001-06-28 01:52:22 +00:00
Tim Peters f6ed0740a8 This no longer leaks memory when run in an infinite loop. However,
that required explicitly calling LazyList.clear() in the two tests that
use LazyList (I added a LazyList Fibonacci generator too).

A real bitch:  the extremely inefficient first version of the 2-3-5 test
*looked* like a slow leak on Win98SE, but it wasn't "really":  it generated
so many results that the heap grew over 4Mb (tons of frames!  the number
of frames grows exponentially in that test).  Then Win98SE malloc() starts
fragmenting address space allocating more and more heaps, and the visible
memory use grew very slowly while the disk was thrashing like mad.
Printing fewer results (i.e., keeping the heap burden under 4Mb) made
that illusion vanish.

Looks like there's no hope for plugging the LazyList leaks automatically
short of adding frameobjects and genobjects to gc.  OTOH, they're very
easy to break by hand, and they're the only *kind* of plausibly realistic
leaks I've been able to provoke.

Dilemma.
2001-06-27 07:17:57 +00:00
Tim Peters e77f2e2798 gen_getattr: make the gi_running and gi_frame members discoverable (but
not writable -- too dangerous!) from Python code.
2001-06-26 22:24:51 +00:00
Tim Peters b6c3ceae79 SF bug #436207: "if 0: yield x" is ignored.
Not anymore <wink>.  Pure hack.  Doesn't fix any other "if 0:" glitches.
2001-06-26 03:36:28 +00:00
Tim Peters 3e7b1a04a0 Teach the types module about generators. Thanks to James Althoff on the
Iterators list for bringing it up!
2001-06-25 19:46:25 +00:00
Tim Peters 2106ef0222 Repair indentation in comment.
Add a temporary driver to help track down remaining leak(s).
2001-06-25 01:30:12 +00:00
Tim Peters b2bc6a93df Added a "generate k-combinations of a list" example posted to c.l.py. 2001-06-24 10:14:27 +00:00
Tim Peters ea2e97a08a New tests to provoke SyntaxErrors unique to generators. Minor fiddling
of other tests.
2001-06-24 07:10:02 +00:00
Tim Peters ee30927b45 Another variant of the 2-3-5 test, mixing generators with a LazyList class.
Good news:  Some of this stuff is pretty sophisticated (read nuts), and
I haven't bumped into a bug yet.
Bad news:  If I run the doctest in an infinite loop, memory is clearly
leaking.
2001-06-24 05:47:06 +00:00
Tim Peters b9e9ff1288 More tests. 2001-06-24 03:44:52 +00:00
Tim Peters 0f9da0acde Add a recursive Sieve of Eratosthenes prime generator. Not practical,
but it's a heck of a good generator exerciser (think about it <wink>).
2001-06-23 21:01:47 +00:00
Tim Peters 6ba5f79674 Add all the examples from PEP 255, and a few email examples. 2001-06-23 20:45:43 +00:00
Tim Peters 1def351b45 New std test for generators, initially populated with doctests NeilS put
together.
2001-06-23 20:27:04 +00:00