Why is there no __iter__() for lists strings and tuples?
Manuel M. Garcia
mgarcia at cole-switches.com
Fri Dec 20 17:23:35 EST 2002
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Fri Dec 20 17:23:35 EST 2002
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On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 20:07:20 GMT, "Parzival Herzog" <parz at shaw.SpamBucket.ca> wrote: (edit) >>>> x = 'abcdef' >>>> x.__iter__() >Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? >AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute '__iter__' Strings, lists, tuples don't need an '__iter__' attribute because the built in 'iter()' function handles them automatically. You only need the '__iter__' attribute in your user defined classes, because that is where 'iter()' will look for it. >>> s = 'ab' >>> i = iter(s) >>> i.next() 'a' >>> i.next() 'b' >>> i.next() Traceback (most recent call last): File "<interactive input>", line 1, in ? StopIteration Manuel
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