any(), all() and empty iterable
Tim Chase
python.list at tim.thechases.com
Sun Apr 12 09:49:29 EDT 2009
Arnaud Delobelle wrote:
> Paul Rubin <http://phr.cx@NOSPAM.invalid> writes:
>
>> Tim Chase <python.list at tim.thechases.com> writes:
>>>> Return True if all elements of the iterable are
>>>> true. ...
>>> Then I'd say the comment is misleading. An empty list has no item
>>> that is true (or false), yet it returns true.
>> The comment is correct. "All the items of the iterable are true"
>> means EXACTLY the same thing as "there are no items of the iterable
>> that are false". The empty list has no false items. Therefore
>> all(empty_list) = True is the correct behavior.
>>
>>
>> Another possible implementation:
>>
>> import operator,itertools
>> def all(xs):
>> return reduce(operator.and_, itertools.imap(bool, xs), True)
>
> A contest! My entry:
>
> def all(iterable):
> return not sum(not x for x in iterable)
Problem with both entries: short-circuit evaluation.
def test_me(how_many=99999999999999999):
yield False
for _ in xrange(how_many): yield True
print all(test_me())
The stdlib version wisely bails on the first False. A
particularly useful aspect when test_me() does something
time-consuming:
def test_me(times=100)
for _ in xrange(times):
yield some_long_running_process_that_usually_returns_false()
where that process may do something like slurp a web-page across
the planet, or calculate some expensive expression.
-tkc
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