On Apr 20, 2020, at 10:42, Ram Rachum <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Here's something that would have saved me some debugging yesterday:
>
> >>> zipped = zip(x, y, z, strict=True)
>
> I suggest that `strict=True` would ensure that all the iterables have been
> exhausted, raising an exception otherwise.
One quick bikeshedding question (which also gets to the heart of how you’d want
to implement it); apologies if this came up in the thread from 2 years ago or
the discussion in the more-iterables PR that I just suggested everyone should
read before commenting, but I wanted to get this down before I forget it.
x = iter(range(5))
y = [0]
try:
zipped = zip(x, y, strict=True)
except ValueError: # assuming that’s the exception you want?
print(next(x))
Should this print 1 or 2 or raise StopIteration or be a don’t-care?
Should it matter if you zip(y, x, strict=True) instead?
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