Here are two functions that split iterable items to sub-lists. I believe that this type of task is programmed many times. I use them to parse log files that consist of repr
lines like ('result', 'case', 123, 4.56) and ('dump', ..) and so on.
I would like to change these so that they will yield iterators rather than lists. Because the list may grow pretty large, but I may be able to decide to take it or skip it based on first few items. Also, if the iter version is available I would like to nest them, but with these list versions that would waste some memory by duplicating parts.
But deriving multiple generators from an iterable source wan't easy for me, so I ask for help. If possible, I wish to avoid introducing new classes.
Also, if you know a better title for this question, please tell me.
Thank you!
def cleave_by_mark (stream, key_fn, end_with_mark=False):
'''[f f t][t][f f] (true) [f f][t][t f f](false)'''
buf = []
for item in stream:
if key_fn(item):
if end_with_mark: buf.append(item)
if buf: yield buf
buf = []
if end_with_mark: continue
buf.append(item)
if buf: yield buf
def cleave_by_change (stream, key_fn):
'''[1 1 1][2 2][3][2 2 2 2]'''
prev = None
buf = []
for item in stream:
iden = key_fn(item)
if prev is None: prev = iden
if prev != iden:
yield buf
buf = []
prev = iden
buf.append(item)
if buf: yield buf
edit: my own answer
Thanks to everyone's answer, I could write what I asked for! Of course, as for the "cleave_for_change" function I could also use itertools.groupby
.
def cleave_by_mark (stream, key_fn, end_with_mark=False):
hand = []
def gen ():
key = key_fn(hand[0])
yield hand.pop(0)
while 1:
if end_with_mark and key: break
hand.append(stream.next())
key = key_fn(hand[0])
if (not end_with_mark) and key: break
yield hand.pop(0)
while 1:
# allow StopIteration in the main loop
if not hand: hand.append(stream.next())
yield gen()
for cl in cleave_by_mark (iter((1,0,0,1,1,0)), lambda x:x):
print list(cl), # start with 1
# -> [1, 0, 0] [1] [1, 0]
for cl in cleave_by_mark (iter((0,1,0,0,1,1,0)), lambda x:x):
print list(cl),
# -> [0] [1, 0, 0] [1] [1, 0]
for cl in cleave_by_mark (iter((1,0,0,1,1,0)), lambda x:x, True):
print list(cl), # end with 1
# -> [1] [0, 0, 1] [1] [0]
for cl in cleave_by_mark (iter((0,1,0,0,1,1,0)), lambda x:x, True):
print list(cl),
# -> [0, 1] [0, 0, 1] [1] [0]
/
def cleave_by_change (stream, key_fn):
'''[1 1 1][2 2][3][2 2 2 2]'''
hand = []
def gen ():
headkey = key_fn(hand[0])
yield hand.pop(0)
while 1:
hand.append(stream.next())
key = key_fn(hand[0])
if key != headkey: break
yield hand.pop(0)
while 1:
# allow StopIteration in the main loop
if not hand: hand.append(stream.next())
yield gen()
for cl in cleave_by_change (iter((1,1,1,2,2,2,3,2)), lambda x:x):
print list(cl),
# -> [1, 1, 1] [2, 2, 2] [3] [2]
CAUTION: If anyone's going to use these, be sure to exhaust the generators at every level, as Andrew pointed out. Because otherwise the outer generator-yielding loop will restart right where the inner generator left instead of where the next "block" begins.
stream = itertools.product('abc','1234', 'ABCD')
for a in iters.cleave_by_change(stream, lambda x:x[0]):
for b in iters.cleave_by_change(a, lambda x:x[1]):
print b.next()
for sink in b: pass
for sink in a: pass
('a', '1', 'A')
('b', '1', 'A')
('c', '1', 'A')