On 8/21/19 11:27 AM, Tobiah wrote:
In the docs for itertools.cycle() there is a bit of equivalent code given:def cycle(iterable): # cycle('ABCD') --> A B C D A B C D A B C D ... saved = [] for element in iterable: yield element saved.append(element) while saved: for element in saved: yield element Is that really how it works? Why make the copy of the elements? This seems to be equivalent: def cycle(iterable): while iterable: for thing in iterable: yield thing
You assume that the initial iterable is reusable. If its not, the only way you can go back to the beginning is to have kept track of it yourself.
-- Rob Gaddi, Highland Technology -- www.highlandtechnology.com Email address domain is currently out of order. See above to fix. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
