reversed(zip(...)) not working as intended
Peter Otten
__peter__ at web.de
Sun Mar 6 13:53:36 EST 2016
Sven R. Kunze wrote:
> what's the reason that reversed(zip(...)) raises as a TypeError?
>
> Would allowing reversed to handle zip and related functions lead to
> strange errors?
In Python 3 zip() can deal with infinite iterables -- what would you expect
from
reversed(zip(count()))
?
If all arguments of zip() are finite and of equal length you can write
zip(reversed(a1), reversed(a2), ...)
or if you find that really useful something like
>>> class myzip(zip):
... def __init__(self, *args):
... self.args = args
... def __reversed__(self):
... return zip(*(reversed(a) for a in self.args))
...
>>> list(reversed(myzip("abc", [1,2,3])))
[('c', 3), ('b', 2), ('a', 1)]
While this might look right at first sight it really opens a can of worms.
First zip():
>>> z = zip("abc", "def")
>>> next(z)
('a', 'd')
>>> list(z)
[('b', 'e'), ('c', 'f')]
Now myzip():
>>> m = myzip("abc", "def")
>>> next(m)
('a', 'd')
>>> list(reversed(m))
[('c', 'f'), ('b', 'e'), ('a', 'd')]
Frankly, I have no idea what consistent behaviour should look like for a
zip() that can be "reverse-iterated".
PS: In Python 2 zip() would produce a list, so
>>> list(reversed(zip("abc", "def")))
[('c', 'f'), ('b', 'e'), ('a', 'd')]
worked without requiring any code in zip().
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