docs on for-loop with no __iter__?
Steven Bethard
steven.bethard at gmail.com
Mon Sep 6 02:17:03 EDT 2004
Andrew Dalke <adalke <at> mindspring.com> writes:
> What I wanted was forward iteration
> in Python 1.x. It happened that forward iteration was
> implemented only on top of indexing, so I had to hijack the
> indexing mechanism to get what I wanted. But I never thought
> of it as "x[i] indexing" only "the hack needed to get forward
> iteration working correctly."
Good, that reaffirms my intuition that you didn't really want the __getitem__
behavior (eg x[i] access) -- it was just the only way to get the __iter__
behavior too.
Would it break old code if the __getitem__ iterator checked for a __len__
method and tried to use it if it was there? It just seems like if you already
know you're creating a sequence type and you have a __len__ and a __getitem__,
then you've already provided all the necessary information for iteration. Why
should you have to define an __iter__ or throw IndexErrors in your __getitem__?
Steve
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