The following solution should be faster and more efficient:
def gen(lst):
yield from lst
yield from gen(lst)
Usage:
>>> g = gen(['a','b','c'])
>>> for x in g:
>>> do something...
>>> if some_reason:
>>> break
>>> [next(g) for _ in range(7)]
['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'a']
Alternatively, if you want a limit to the cycling generator, you can use the following version which allows you to set (optionally) the total length of the output sequence:
def gen(lst,limit=None):
if type(limit) == int:
g = gen(lst)
for _ in range(limit):
yield next(g)
return
yield from lst
yield from gen(lst,limit)
Usage:
>>> g = gen(['a','b','c'], limit=7))
>>> for x in g:
>>> do something (for 7 times)...
>>> list(g)
['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'a']
N.B. If the limit you set is greater than Python recursion capabilities (usually 1000 recursions) you can improve such capabilities through the following code:
>>> import sys
>>> sys.setrecursionlimit(some_greater_limit)