g.next() has been renamed to g.__next__(). The reason for this is consistency: special methods like __init__() and __del__() all have double underscores (or "dunder" in the current vernacular), and .next() was one of the few exceptions to that rule. This was fixed in Python 3.0. [*]
But instead of calling g.__next__(), use next(g).
[*] There are other special attributes that have gotten this fix; func_name, is now __name__, etc.
Try:
next(g)
Check out this neat table that shows the differences in syntax between 2 and 3 when it comes to this.
If your code must run under Python2 and Python3, use the 2to3 six library like this:
import six
six.next(g) # on PY2K: 'g.next()' and onPY3K: 'next(g)'
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