Refer to the PEP479, which says that
The interaction of generators and StopIteration is currently somewhat
surprising, and can conceal obscure bugs. An unexpected exception
should not result in subtly altered behaviour, but should cause a
noisy and easily-debugged traceback. Currently, StopIteration raised
accidentally inside a generator function will be interpreted as the
end of the iteration by the loop construct driving the generator.
(emphasis mine)
So the constructor of list
iterates over the passed generator expression until the StopIteration
error is raised (by calling next(iterable)
without the second argument). Another example:
def f():
raise StopIteration # explicitly
def g():
return 'g'
print(list(x() for x in (g, f, g))) # ['g']
print([x() for x in (g, f, g)]) # `f` raises StopIteration
On the other hand, * comprehensions work differently as they propagate the StopIteration
to the caller.
The behaviour that the linked PEP proposed is as follows
If a StopIteration
is about to bubble out of a generator frame, it is
replaced with RuntimeError
, which causes the next()
call (which
invoked the generator) to fail, passing that exception out. From then
on it's just like any old exception.
Python 3.5 added the generator_stop
feature which can be enabled using
from __future__ import generator_stop
This behaviour will be default in Python 3.7.