one to many (passing variables)
Antoon Pardon
antoon.pardon at rece.vub.ac.be
Wed Jul 30 08:09:51 EDT 2014
On 30-07-14 13:37, Peter Otten wrote:
> Antoon Pardon wrote:
>
>> Taking this in consideration I think the io.RawIOBase.read got it
>> backwards.
>>
>> The documentation says the following:
>>
>> | If 0 bytes are returned, and size was not 0, this indicates end of file.
>> | If the object is in non-blocking mode and no bytes are available, None
>> | is returned.
>>
>> But typically if you are reading in non-blocking mode, no bytes availabe
>> can be treated as if you receive an empty (byte)string. While reaching the
>> end of the stream is different. So it would have been more consistent if
>> an empty (byte)string was return in case of no bytes availabe and None or
>> io.EOF or something like that in case of end of file.
>>
>> Now I have to write things as follows:
>>
>> for block in iter(partial(RawStream.read, 1024), ''):
>> if block is not None:
>> for b in block
>> process(b)
> or
>
> for block in ...:
> for b in block or ():
> process(b)
No it obscures what is going on and is prone to problems if you have more code
that expects block to be a (byte)string. I think this is better:
for block in ...:
block = block or ''
for b in block:
process(b)
do_other_stuff_with(block)
It is not that big a deal but you can't escape testing for an exceptional
value, whether you do it with an if or with an or. A test that wouldn't
be needed if they had done it the other way around. IMO they stayed too
close to how things are done in C.
>> Otherwise I could write it more as follows:
>>
>> for block in iter(partial(RawStream.read, 1024), io.EOF):
>> for b in block
>> process(b)
>
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