weafon wrote:
<div class="moz-text-flowed" style="font-family: -moz-fixed">Hi guys,
I have a question about the usage of yield. As shown in the below
example, in general, if there is a code segment commonly used by two
or more functions, we may isolate the segment into a function and then
call it from other functions if necessary.
def func1():
....
while(cond):
.....
commoncode()
...
def func2():
....
while(cond):
.....
commoncode()
...
def commoncode()
AAAA
BBBB
CCCC
However, if there is a 'yield' operation in the common code segment,
the isolation causes that func1 and func2 become a non-generator
function!! Although I can prevent such an isolation by just
duplicating the segment in func1 and func2 to keep both of them being
generator functions, the code may become ugly and hard to maintain
particularly when coomoncode() is long.
The problem may be resolved if I can define the commoncode() as an
inline function or marco. Unfortunately, inline and marco do not seems
to be implemented in python. Thus, how can I isolate a common segment
into a function when there are yield operations in the common segment?
Thanks,
Weafon
You are implying there's something special or unique about yield in
this. Return has the same problem, and many other flow control
constructs. Also, variable definitions and scoping.
So you can't just copy any old bunch of adjacent lines out of two
functions, put it into a third, and call it factoring. Give us a
specific example you're puzzled about, and we can try to solve it.
DaveA
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