On Sun, 2007-05-27 at 14:59 -0700, Steve Howell wrote: > Huh? How is code that uses itertools.groupby not an > actual example of using itertools.groupby?
Here's how: """ The returned group is itself an iterator that shares the underlying iterable with groupby(). Because the source is shared, when the groupby object is advanced, the previous group is no longer visible. So, if that data is needed later, it should be stored as a list: groups = [] uniquekeys = [] for k, g in groupby(data, keyfunc): groups.append(list(g)) # Store group iterator as a list uniquekeys.append(k) """ It does not say "Here is an example for how to use itertools.groupby." It's an abstract code pattern for an abstract use case. There is an example on the following page, called Examples! > These docs need work. Please do not defend them; The docs do their job in specifying what groupby does. Providing code snippets is not the job of the documentation. There are plenty of other resources with code snippets. To name just one, there's an example of itertools.groupby in the last code snippet at http://informixdb.blogspot.com/2007/04/power-of-generators-part-two.html > please suggest improvements. Why should I? The docs suit my needs just fine. Of course, that shouldn't stop you from suggesting improvements. Best regards, -- Carsten Haese http://informixdb.sourceforge.net -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list