[Python-Dev] Tricky way of of creating a generator via a comprehension expression
Ivan Levkivskyi
levkivskyi at gmail.com
Wed Nov 22 11:38:11 EST 2017
On 22 November 2017 at 17:16, Paul Moore <p.f.moore at gmail.com> wrote:
> On 22 November 2017 at 16:08, Ivan Levkivskyi <levkivskyi at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > On 22 November 2017 at 16:56, Yury Selivanov <yselivanov.ml at gmail.com>
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> On Wed, Nov 22, 2017 at 10:10 AM, Ivan Levkivskyi <levkivskyi at gmail.com
> >
> >> wrote:
> >> > On 22 November 2017 at 15:47, Paul Moore <p.f.moore at gmail.com> wrote:
> >> [...]
> >> I'm all for prohibiting using 'yield' expression in generator
> >> expressions or comprehensions. The semantics is way to hard to
> >> understand and hence be of any value.
> >>
> >> Making 'await' a SyntaxError is absolutely not an option. Async
> >> generator expressions are a shorthand syntax for defining asynchronous
> >> generators (PEP 525), and it's already being used in the wild.
> >
> >
> > OK, makes sense, so it looks like we may have the following plan:
> >
> > - fix `yield` in comprehensions
>
> I'm still not clear what "fix" would actually mean, but you propose
> clarifying the docs below, so I assume it means "according to whatever
> the updated docs say"...
>
>
I mean the initial proposal: make comprehensions equivalent to a for-loop
> > - update PEP 530 and docs re generator expressions vs comprehensions
>
> Docs more importantly than PEP IMO. And are you implying that there's
> a difference between generator expressions and comprehensions? I
> thought both were intended to behave as if expanded to a function
> containing nested for loops? Nothing said in this thread so far (about
> semantics, as opposed to about current behaviour) implies there's a
> deliberate difference.
>
I think there may be a difference:
comprehension `g = [(yield i) for i in range(3)]` is defined as this code:
__result = []
__i = None
try:
for __i in range(3):
__result.append(yield __i)
g = __result
finally:
del __result, __i
while `g = list((yield i) for i in range(3))` is defined as this code:
def __gen():
for i in range(3):
yield (yield i)
g = list(__gen())
Although these two definitions are equivalent in simple cases (like having
`f(i)` instead of `yield i`)
But this is debatable, I think before we move to other points we need to
agree on the clear definitions of semantics of generator expressions and
comprehensions.
--
Ivan
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