for elt in itertools.chain.from_iterable(node):
if elt is the last element:
do statement
How do I achieve this
You can do this by manually advancing the iterator in a while loop using iter.next()
, then catching the StopIteration
exception:
>>> from itertools import chain
>>> it = chain([1,2,3],[4,5,6],[7,8,9])
>>> while True:
... try:
... elem = it.next()
... except StopIteration:
... print "Last element was:", elem, "... do something special now"
... break
... print "Got element:", elem
...
...
Got element: 1
Got element: 2
Got element: 3
Got element: 4
Got element: 5
Got element: 6
Got element: 7
Got element: 8
Got element: 9
Last element was: 9 ... do something special now
>>>
When the loop ends, the elt
variable doesn't go out of scope, and still holds the last value given to it by the loop. So you could just put the code at the end of the loop and operate on the elt
variable. It's not terribly pretty, but Python's scoping rules aren't pretty either.
The only problem with this (thanks, cvondrick) is that the loop might never execute, which would mean that elt
doesn't exist - we'd get a NameError
. So the full way to do it would be roughly:
del elt # not necessary if we haven't use elt before, but just in case
for elt in itertools.chain.from_iterable(node):
do_stuff_to_each(elt)
try:
do_stuff_to_last(elt)
except NameError: # no last elt to do stuff to
pass
else
clause.
Commented
Jan 13, 2010 at 17:52
for x in (): print x else: print x
gives a NameError
. We need to catch the exception to cover the case where it never executes. (And putting it in an else
wouldn't execute if we broke out of the loop. Which we might want to do.)
Commented
Jan 13, 2010 at 17:54
You can't per se. You'd need to store the current item, advance the iterator, and catch the StopIteration
exception. And then you'd need to somehow signal that you have the last item.
I do something like this:
rng = len(mlist)
for i in range(rng):
foo = mlist[i]
foo.do_something_for_every_item_regardless()
if i == rng - 1: #since we go from 0 to rng-1
foo.last_item_only_operation()
Here's a utility function that works like enumerate()
except returns a bool if this was the last element.
Now you don't have to add any additional lines, and this works on iterables besides lists.
def endify(itr):
'''
Like enumerate() except returns a bool if this is the last item instead of the number
'''
itr = iter(itr)
has_item = False
ended = False
next_item = None
while not ended:
try:
next_item = next(itr)
except StopIteration:
ended = True
if has_item:
yield ended, item
has_item = True
item = next_item
Look how clean this can be used now:
for end, i in endify(range(3)):
print(f'Item: {i}, End: {end}')
Item: 0, End: False
Item: 1, End: False
Item: 2, End: True