> I often do a loop over arbitrary number of sequences. I do it like this: > >for elem1 in seq1: > for elem2 in seq2: > do whatever seq1,seq2 > > this isn`t nice I think.
Actually its pretty common and not that ugly. But... > myiterator=geniousfunction(seq1,seq2,seq3) > > and then myiterator.next() and have it return the corresponding elemnts > from all sequences The problem is that there are so many different ways you can do that. Python offers several options but none of them solve all the cases. Look at the documentation for List Comprehensions zip() map() filter() reduce() > seq1 = ['a','b'] > seq2 = [1,2] > a 1 > a 2 > b 1 > b 2 [a,b for a in seq1 for b in seq2] > how do you loop over all the elements that can be returned by > myiterator? return the options as a list of tuples and then use the usual list iteration techniques. for elem in [a,b for a in seq1 for b in seq2]: # use elem here HTH Alan G Author of the learn to program web tutor http://www.freenetpages.co.uk/hp/alan.gauld _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor