On Thu, Dec 27, 2012 at 7:44 AM, Joseph L. Casale <jcas...@activenetwerx.com> wrote: > I am writing a class to provide a db backed configuration for an application. > > In my programs code, I import the class and pass the ODBC params to the > class for its __init__ to instantiate a connection. > > I would like to create a function to generically access a table and provide an > iterator. How does one create a function in a class that takes an argument and > returns an iterator? I saw some examples where the class gets instantiated > with the table defined but I was hoping not to do this so I could continue to > access various tables through one connection/cursor.
It's probably best if you use separate cursors anyway. Say you have two methods with a shared cursor: def iter_table_a(self): self.cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM TABLE_A") yield from self.cursor def iter_table_b(self): self.cursor.execute("SELECT * FROM TABLE_B") yield from self.cursor If the client code calls iter_table_a and partially iterates over the result, and then needs to use iter_table_b for some reason, then when it gets back to the table A results the data will be gone. You can only safely share cursors when you can guarantee that each query will be completely processed before the next query is run, and you can't guarantee that if you're just returning iterators. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list