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I have two iterators, a list and an itertools.count object (i.e. an infinite value generator). I would like to merge these two into a resulting iterator that will alternate yield values between the two:

>>> import itertools
>>> c = itertools.count(1)
>>> items = ['foo', 'bar']
>>> merged = imerge(items, c)  # the mythical "imerge"
>>> merged.next()
'foo'
>>> merged.next()
1
>>> merged.next()
'bar'
>>> merged.next()
2
>>> merged.next()
Traceback (most recent call last):
    ...
StopIteration

What is the simplest, most concise way to do this?

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12 Answers

up vote 20 down vote accepted

A generator will solve your problem nicely.

def imerge(a, b):
    for i, j in itertools.izip(a,b):
        yield i
        yield j
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5  
You should add a disclaimer - this will only work if list a is finite. – Claudiu Oct 28 '08 at 16:17
import itertools def imerge(a, b): for i, j in zip(a,b): yield i yield j c = itertools.count(1) items = ['foo', 'bar'] for i in imerge(c, items): print i I'm trying this, and this still works. len(zipped list) = min(l1, l2). So the finite length restriction is not required. – Pramod Oct 28 '08 at 16:22
1  
Claudiu is correct. Try zipping two infinite generators--you will run out of memory eventually. I would prefer using itertools.izip instead of zip. Then you build the zip as you go, instead of all at once. You still have to watch out for infinite loops, but hey. – David Eyk Oct 28 '08 at 16:40
1  
This would be my accepted answer, as I like the concise clarity of it. However, I balk at the use of zip instead of itertools.izip. – David Eyk Oct 28 '08 at 16:49
1  
In Python 3.0 zip() behaves like itertools.izip(). – J.F. Sebastian Dec 1 '08 at 21:47
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You can do something that is almost exaclty what @Pramod first suggested.

def izipmerge(a, b):
  for i, j in itertools.izip(a,b):
    yield i
    yield j

The advantage of this approach is that you won't run out of memory if both a and b are infinite.

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Quite correct, David. @Pramod changed his answer to use izip before I noticed yours, but thanks! – David Eyk Oct 28 '08 at 17:03
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I'd do something like this. This will be most time and space efficient, since you won't have the overhead of zipping objects together. This will also work if both a and b are infinite.

def imerge(a, b):
    i1 = iter(a)
    i2 = iter(b)
    while True:
        try:
            yield i1.next()
            yield i2.next()
        except StopIteration:
            return
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The try/except here breaks the iterator protocol by muffling the StopIteration, doesn't it? – David Eyk Oct 28 '08 at 16:46
@David Eyk: it's OK, because returning from a generator raises StopIteration anyway. The try statement in this case is superfluous. – efotinis Oct 28 '08 at 18:00
@efotinis: I did not know this. Thanks! – David Eyk Oct 29 '08 at 3:48
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You can use zip as well as itertools.chain. This will only work if the first list is finite:

merge=itertools.chain(*[iter(i) for i in zip(['foo', 'bar'], itertools.count(1))])
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Why do you have a restriction on the size of the first list? – Pramod Oct 28 '08 at 16:17
1  
It doesn't need to be so complicated, though: merged = chain.from_iterable(izip(items, count(1))) will do it. – intuited Jun 21 '10 at 3:28
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I also agree that itertools is not needed.

But why stop at 2?

  def tmerge(*iterators):
    for values in zip(*iterators):
      for value in values:
        yield value

handles any number of iterators from 0 on upwards.

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I'm not sure what your application is, but you might find the enumerate() function more useful.

>>> items = ['foo', 'bar', 'baz']
>>> for i, item in enumerate(items):
...  print item
...  print i
... 
foo
0
bar
1
baz
2
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I always forget about enumerate! What a useful little tool, though it won't work in my particular application. Thanks! – David Eyk Oct 29 '08 at 3:54
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One of the less well known features of Python is that you can have more for clauses in a generator expression. Very useful for flattening nested lists, like those you get from zip()/izip().

def imerge(*iterators):
    return (value for row in itertools.izip(*iterators) for value in row)
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Definitely would work, though I find nested generator expressions less than readable. I'd use this style if I were worried about performance. – David Eyk Mar 30 '11 at 17:07
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Why is itertools needed?

def imerge(a,b):
    for i,j in zip(a,b):
    	yield i
    	yield j

In this case at least one of a or b must be of finite length, cause zip will return a list, not an iterator. If you need an iterator as output then you can go for the Claudiu solution.

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I prefer an iterator, as I'm reading values from files of arbitrary size. I'm sure there are cases where zip is superior. – David Eyk Oct 29 '08 at 3:53
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Using itertools.izip(), instead of zip() as in some of the other answers, will improve performance:

As "pydoc itertools.izip" shows: "Works like the zip() function but consumes less memory by returning an iterator instead of a list."

Itertools.izip will also work properly even if one of the iterators is infinite.

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Use izip and chain together:

>>> list(itertools.chain.from_iterable(itertools.izip(items, c))) # 2.6 only
['foo', 1, 'bar', 2]

>>> list(itertools.chain(*itertools.izip(items, c)))
['foo', 1, 'bar', 2]
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A concise method is to use a generator expression with itertools.cycle(). It avoids creating a long chain() of tuples.

generator = (it.next() for it in itertools.cycle([i1, i2]))
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I prefer this other way which is much more concise:

iter = reduce(lambda x,y: itertools.chain(x,y), iters)
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