I have an object subclass which implements a dynamic dispatch __ iter __ using a caching generator (I also have a method for invalidating the iter cache) like so:
def __iter__(self):
print("iter called")
if self.__iter_cache is None:
iter_seen = {}
iter_cache = []
for name in self.__slots:
value = self.__slots[name]
iter_seen[name] = True
item = (name, value)
iter_cache.append(item)
yield item
for d in self.__dc_list:
for name, value in iter(d):
if name not in iter_seen:
iter_seen[name] = True
item = (name, value)
iter_cache.append(item)
yield item
self.__iter_cache = iter_cache
else:
print("iter cache hit")
for item in self.__iter_cache:
yield item
It seems to be working... Are there any gotchas I may not be aware of? Am I doing something ridiculous?

setinstead of adictfor theiter_seenstructure. – Jonas Wielicki Jul 5 '12 at 15:11for _ in iter(whatever)withfor _ in whatever. You never neediterinsideforstatement – J.F. Sebastian Jul 5 '12 at 15:30seen = set(); ... if name not in seen: ... seen.add(name);– J.F. Sebastian Jul 5 '12 at 15:42Truevalues in your dict do. – bukzor Jul 5 '12 at 16:23for x in iter(y)is redundant. The for statement will make an iterator as needed.for x in yis idomatic python. – bukzor Jul 5 '12 at 16:38