a problem with writing a generator
Dave Angel
davea at ieee.org
Thu Jan 14 10:42:43 EST 2010
PaweB Bany[ wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Please forgive me if I repeat the subject anyhow. I am trying to write a
> simple program in Python which scans a config file in search for
> "include" lines. If those lines are found, the files included there are
> followed and scanned and if any further "include" lines are found, the
> whole procedure repeats itself. The program ends when the whole tree
> structure of those "includes" is generated.
>
> I seem to have some blackout in my mind because I cannot understand how
> to use a generator functionality to complete the task. If anybody has
> already done such thing I would be very grateful for any guidance.
>
> Regards,
>
> Paweł
>
>
If you really want a tree structure, then I don't see why you expect a
generator to be necessary, or helpful. A generator is frequently a good
way tor reduce a tree to linear form, so if you were trying to make a
single set of includes, I'd write a generator. Otherwise, you just need
a recursive function.
Do you understand recursion? Have you any experience with it in other
programming languages?
In this case, you write a single function that takes a filename as an
argument, and returns a list of the includes contained within it. Then,
inside that function, right after finding such an include, you call the
same function, passing it the include name, and append the return value
to your own list.
All the details of building the tree just work, if you get it right.
If you get stuck implementing this outline, then post whatever code you
have so far, and give the reason why you're stuck. Also, at that point,
define exactly what you expect the "tree" to look like. There are at
least a few reasonable choices, and there's no point in heading the
wrong way.
DaveA
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