should I transfer 'iterators' between functions?
Ned Batchelder
ned at nedbatchelder.com
Sat Jan 25 07:55:10 EST 2014
On 1/25/14 1:37 AM, seaspeak at gmail.com wrote:
> take the following as an example, which could work well.
> But my concern is, will list 'l' be deconstructed after function return? and then iterator point to nowhere?
>
> def test():
> l = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]
> return iter(l)
> def main():
> for i in test():
> print(i)
>
>
The two things to understand here are names, and values. When you leave
the function test, the name l goes away, because it is a locally scoped
name. It referred to a value, your list. But values have reference
counts, and are not reclaimed until their reference count drops to zero.
Your function is returning a value, a listiterator, and that
listiterator refers to the list, so the list won't be reclaimed.
Names have scopes but no types. Values have types, but no scope. They
live as long as they are referred to by something.
This is covered in more detail here:
http://nedbatchelder.com/text/names.html
--
Ned Batchelder, http://nedbatchelder.com
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