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Iterator Protocol
.. highlightlang:: c
.. versionadded:: 2.2
There are only a couple of functions specifically for working with iterators.
.. cfunction:: int PyIter_Check(PyObject *o) Return true if the object *o* supports the iterator protocol.
.. cfunction:: PyObject* PyIter_Next(PyObject *o) Return the next value from the iteration *o*. If the object is an iterator, this retrieves the next value from the iteration, and returns *NULL* with no exception set if there are no remaining items. If the object is not an iterator, :exc:`TypeError` is raised, or if there is an error in retrieving the item, returns *NULL* and passes along the exception.
To write a loop which iterates over an iterator, the C code should look something like this:
PyObject *iterator = PyObject_GetIter(obj); PyObject *item; if (iterator == NULL) { /* propagate error */ } while (item = PyIter_Next(iterator)) { /* do something with item */ ... /* release reference when done */ Py_DECREF(item); } Py_DECREF(iterator); if (PyErr_Occurred()) { /* propagate error */ } else { /* continue doing useful work */ }
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