I submitted this as bug last night: http://bugs.python.org/issue17584 and was *honored* to be rejected by Raymond Hettinger. However, I would like feedback on whether my concern (this bug) is justified and clarity if not.
Consider: ```python class A(object): def __init__(self): self.r = iter(range(5)) def __iter__(self): return self @property def next(self): return next(self.r) ``` The `next` method is a property, however: ```python from collections import Iterator a = A() isinstance(a, Iterator) # True next(a) # TypeError: 'int' object is not callable ``` I am using `collections.Iterator` as the means to check if the object is an iterator, however I am not sure if that is _root_ problem here. My understanding of the iterator protocol is that is assumes the __iter__ and next *methods* are implemented. In the example, `A.next` is defined as a property, but is still identified as an iterator. To me, this is incorrect behavior since it's not conforming to the iterator protocol requirements (i.e. a `next` method, not a property). Raymond stated: "The design of ABCs are to check for the existence to required named; none of them verify the signature." I think I understand _why_ this is the case.. but I downstream libraries use `collections.Iterator` to determine if an object _is one_: see https://github.com/django/django/blob/master/django/utils/itercompat.py#L22-L31 Who's job is it to check if `next` (and technically `__iter__`) are methods? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list