Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Async generator is not an iterator?

In Python you can write a generator that is iterable like:

def generate(count):     for x in range(count):         yield x  # as an iterator you can apply the function next() to get the values. it = generate(10) r0 = next(it) r1 = next(it) ... 

When trying to use an async iterator, you get the 'yield inside async' error. The suggested solution is to implement your own generator:

class async_generator:     def __aiter__(self):         return self      async def __anext__(self):         await asyncio.sleep()         return random.randint(0, 10)          # But when you try to get the next element it = async_generator(10) r0 = next(it) 

You get the error "async_generator" object is not an iterator

I think that if you are going to call something an Iterator it's because it has exactly the same interface, so I can just write async iterators and use on a framework that relies heavily on next() calls. Any new Python capability is pointless if you need to rewrite your entire code to be able to use async.

Am I missing something?

Thanks!

like image 756
user1275011 Avatar asked Feb 24 '17 21:02

user1275011


People also ask

How do I iterate through async generator?

The syntax is simple: prepend function* with async . That makes the generator asynchronous. And then use for await (...) to iterate over it, like this: async function* generateSequence(start, end) { for (let i = start; i <= end; i++) { // Wow, can use await!

What are async iterators?

An async iterator is like an iterator except that its next() method returns a promise that resolves to the {value, done} object. The following illustrates the Sequence class that implements the iterator interface. (Check it out the iterator tutorial for more information on how to implement Sequence class.)


2 Answers

So, as @bosnjak said, you can use async for:

async for ITEM in A_ITER:     BLOCK1 else: # optional     BLOCK2 

But if you want to iterate manually, you can simply write:

it = async_iterator() await it.__anext__() 

But I wouldn't recommend to do that.

I think that if you are going to call something an Iterator its because it has exactly the same interface, so I can just write async iterators and use on a framework that relies heavily on next() calls

No, acutally it's not the same. There is a difference between regular synchronous iterators and asynchronous ones. And there few reasons for that:

  1. Python coroutines are built on top of generators internally
  2. According to Zen of python, explicit is better than implicit. So that you will actually see, where code can be suspended.

That's why it's impossible to use iter and next with asynchronous iterators. And you cannot use them with frameworks that expects synchronous iterators. So if you are going to make your code asynchronous, you have to use asynchronous frameworks as well. Here are few of them.

Also, I would like to say a few words about iterators and generators. Iterator is a special object that has __iter__ and __next__ methods. Whereas generator is a special function containing yield expression. Every generator is an iterator, but not vice versa. The same thing is acceptable to asynchronous iterators and generators. Yes, since python 3.6 you are able to write asynchronous generators!

async def ticker(delay, to):     for i in range(to):         yield i         await asyncio.sleep(delay) 

You can read PEP 525 for more details

like image 126
Michael Ihnatenko Avatar answered Sep 27 '22 16:09

Michael Ihnatenko


I believe a new statement was introduced for async generators:

async for TARGET in ITER:     BLOCK else:     BLOCK2 

according to PEP 492.

Basically, this would mean you should do:

async for number in generate(10):         print(number) 

Also, check the Differences from generators:

Native coroutine objects do not implement iter and next methods. Therefore, they cannot be iterated over or passed to iter() , list() , tuple() and other built-ins. They also cannot be used in a for..in loop. An attempt to use iter or next on a native coroutine object will result in a TypeError .

like image 35
bosnjak Avatar answered Sep 27 '22 17:09

bosnjak