The object returned by range()
(or xrange()
in Python2.x) is known as a lazy iterable.
Instead of storing the entire range, [0,1,2,..,9]
, in memory, the generator stores a definition for (i=0; i<10; i+=1)
and computes the next value only when needed (AKA lazy-evaluation).
Essentially, a generator allows you to return a list like structure, but here are some differences:
- A list stores all elements when it is created. A generator generates the next element when it is needed.
- A list can be iterated over as much as you need, a generator can only be iterated over exactly once.
- A list can get elements by index, a generator cannot -- it only generates values once, from start to end.
A generator can be created in two ways:
(1) Very similar to a list comprehension:
# this is a list, create all 5000000 x/2 values immediately, uses []
lis = [x/2 for x in range(5000000)]
# this is a generator, creates each x/2 value only when it is needed, uses ()
gen = (x/2 for x in range(5000000))
(2) As a function, using yield
to return the next value:
# this is also a generator, it will run until a yield occurs, and return that result.
# on the next call it picks up where it left off and continues until a yield occurs...
def divby2(n):
num = 0
while num < n:
yield num/2
num += 1
# same as (x/2 for x in range(5000000))
print divby2(5000000)
Note: Even though range(5000000)
is a generator in Python3.x, [x/2 for x in range(5000000)]
is still a list. range(...)
does it's job and generates x
one at a time, but the entire list of x/2
values will be computed when this list is create.
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