On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 06:13:39 +0000, I V wrote: > On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 15:39:22 +1000, Steven D'Aprano wrote: >> I thought that an iterator was any object that follows the iterator >> protocol, that is, it has a next() method and an __iter__() method.
[snip] > i.e., just rename your _next function to __iter__ . Your class won't > itself be an iterator, but it will be usable in for statements and so one, > and convertable to an iterator with the iter builtin. Thanks to all those who helped, this fixed my problem. For the record, this is what I actually wanted: a four-line self-sorting dictionary: class SortedDict(dict): def __iter__(self): for key in sorted(self.keys()): yield key Note that using sorted(self) does not work. Iterating over a SortedDictionary returns the keys in sorted order. This minimalist implementation doesn't sort the values, items or string representation of the dict, but they should be easy to implement. -- Steven D'Aprano -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list