Makoto Kuwata wrote: > Question about 'yield from'. > > I understand that:: > > yield from xs > > is syntax suger of:: > > for x in xs: > yield x
Not quite syntactic sugar. For simple cases, it does exactly the same thing. For more complicated cases, no. Suppose you have a generator: def spam(): yield "Spam!" yield "More spam!" yield "Delicious spam!!!" and you have another generator which delegates to the spam generator: def lunch1(): for food in spam(): yield food yield "plus a fried egg" We can now re-write the generator using "yield from": def lunch2(): yield from spam() yield "plus a fried egg" That saves one line of code. Big deal. Here, it is pure syntactic sugar. There are more interesting cases, where "yield from" is more powerful than the for-loop version. Here is an example with throw: py> it = lunch1() # Create an iterator. py> next(it) 'Spam!' py> it.throw(ValueError) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "<stdin>", line 3, in lunch1 ValueError Notice that the ValueError is raised inside lunch1(). There is no easy way to push the exception back inside spam(). But with "yield from", it works: py> it = lunch2() # New "yield from" generator. py> next(it) 'Spam!' py> it.throw(ValueError) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "<stdin>", line 2, in lunch2 File "<stdin>", line 2, in spam ValueError Of course, spam() is free to catch the exception and perform processing. > And:: > > val = yield from xs > > is same as:: > > for x in xs: > ret = yield x > val = ret No. This is closer to what happens: # Not exactly this. # This is a simplified version. try: for x in xs: yield x except StopIteration as err: val = err.value The real version is much more complicated, 39 lines of code, and deals with generator .close() and .throw() methods, error checking, and various other issues. That is why "yield from" was added to Python. The simple case is too simple to care about, the complicated cases are too complicated to expect people to write their own solutions, so it was added to the language. -- Steven -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list