Python Generators

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  • Опубліковано 27 чер 2024
  • Python generators are lazy sequences and pausable functions.
    ― mCoding with James Murphy (mcoding.io)
    Source code: github.com/mCodingLLC/VideosS...
    Generators as coros: peps.python.org/pep-0342/
    For loops vid: • For loops are redundant
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    CHAPTERS
    ---------------------------------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    0:16 Defining generators
    1:55 Iterators and Range
    3:49 File processing
    4:55 Lazy sequences and Collatz
    7:19 Generator comprehensions
    8:05 Generator pipelines
    9:49 Advanced usage, send/throw/close
    13:05 Yield from
    15:12 Thanks
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 220

  • @biffenb7534
    @biffenb7534 Рік тому +391

    I love the relatively monotone presentation, which helps clarity, with only a few incredibly well placed jokes sprinkled here and there. Keep it up!

    • @Holphana
      @Holphana Рік тому +9

      Monotone? I hear many inflections.
      I would be offended at the implication towards my accent if I were in the UA-camrs shoes. 😢

    • @biffenb7534
      @biffenb7534 Рік тому +21

      @@Holphana You’re right, I just didn’t choose my words carefully enough. What I mean is that the presentation is that of a factual text, instead of creating unnecessary clutter through adding emotion or emphasis like so many other UA-camrs do.

    • @Ptolemarch
      @Ptolemarch Рік тому +1

      Indeed, these are vastly the best videos on coding I've found.

    • @RoamingAdhocrat
      @RoamingAdhocrat Рік тому

      What's really missing is a title card with a photo of M with chin in hands looking puzzle, or head-in-hands despairing at some topic that was exhorted in many keynote talks - TDD, say

    • @NewLondonMarshall
      @NewLondonMarshall 10 днів тому

      What a wholesome reply :) ​@@biffenb7534

  • @l4luchi123
    @l4luchi123 Рік тому +144

    No matter how experienced you are, in your videos there is always a new small detail you didn't know about. Love it!

    • @georgplaz
      @georgplaz Рік тому +6

      yes! I thought "oh. I know everything about yielding.."
      and then.. bi-directional?! 🤯

  • @SwissTHX11384EB
    @SwissTHX11384EB Рік тому +137

    Mate, I have years of Python experience, yet everytime you release a video I am floored by some of the stuff you showcase and I feel like I'm learning about the language for the first time. Stellar job, as always, and your presentation style is excellent for the job.

    • @luiz8755
      @luiz8755 11 місяців тому

      same
      it's a little bit overwhelming lol

  • @ssholum
    @ssholum Рік тому +90

    Async (vs threading vs "other kinda-multitasking methods") video would be greatly appreciated. It's not the most useful stuff for your average script or simple program, so I rarely see good explanations of it for any language.

  • @adsfwef1331
    @adsfwef1331 Рік тому +46

    Dude, you are a genius. I wonder why your vids aren't getting more views than those other millions of python hacks out there. Keep up the good work.

  • @dhravya
    @dhravya Рік тому +52

    Always struggled with generators. Thanks for the amazing explanation!

  • @mabml
    @mabml Рік тому +34

    Your async explanation would be much appreciated! :)

  • @LettuceAttack176
    @LettuceAttack176 Рік тому +14

    I swear every time I start watching a video on this channel I think “ah here is another thing I already know in python I probably won’t learn anything new this topic is pretty straight forward” and I end the video feeling like I never knew anything about it to begin with 😂😂 keep up the great work

  • @GlutesEnjoyer
    @GlutesEnjoyer Рік тому +3

    “Even if a file is gigabytes large you’ll only need enough memory to handle a single line” great point!

  • @Fikerus2
    @Fikerus2 Рік тому +23

    I write things like "sum(x for x in range(10))" very often and I didn't know that was generator comprehension! I was thinking it was the same as writing "sum([x for x in range(10)])" (with brackets). Thanks a lot for your content!

    • @yazanalhariri3700
      @yazanalhariri3700 Рік тому +1

      Me too!

    • @enkryp
      @enkryp Рік тому +4

      Why using a comprehension at all? Can't we just do sum(range(10)) ?

    • @MrRyanroberson1
      @MrRyanroberson1 Рік тому +1

      @@enkryp i was just about to mention! yeah range is directly iterable

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Рік тому +1

      That’s the difference between an “iterator” and an “iterable”. An “iterable” has an ‗‗iter‗‗ method, which returns an iterator when it is called. The iterator is what returns the elements of the sequence, until it is exhausted and can’t be called again.
      Because range() is an iterable, you can reuse a single range object to return any number of iterators over that range.

    • @Geza_Molnar_
      @Geza_Molnar_ Рік тому

      @@lawrencedoliveiro9104 Yeah, your explanation helps me a lot.

  • @Gamecrazy721
    @Gamecrazy721 Рік тому +23

    Very insightful video! One other place I've seen generators used frequently is for API pagination. If, for instance, if you want to get all 100 records from an API, and the API limits your query to 10 records per call, you may not want to wait for all 10 calls. Instead you create a generator that calls the API only when you've completed working with the first page and are ready to move onto the second, etc.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 Рік тому +4

      Database queries is a good example. A very common sequence is
      * Create a cursor object
      * Execute a query on the cursor
      * Iterate over the results returned from the cursor
      * Close the cursor.
      You can wrap all these steps up in a single generator function, which takes the query and lets you iterate over the results in a single step.

  • @vincentperrollaz5261
    @vincentperrollaz5261 Рік тому +15

    Outstanding video as always.
    itertools might have deserved a mention since it is very useful with generators.
    The jump from iterator to coroutine was a bit steep and I would personally love an async video

  • @rituchandra6325
    @rituchandra6325 Рік тому +4

    "Where the only limit, is your imagination... and your download speed" - LOL I lost it here

  • @ahmadhesham1389
    @ahmadhesham1389 Рік тому +4

    This is why I like your channel: Even when I think I know a topic well, I still expect to find something new in your videos, and I always do. Keep it up!

  • @69k_gold
    @69k_gold 10 місяців тому +2

    Thank you! By learning this I was able to create a toy version of the async coroutines, helped me a lot to grasp the concept of event loops

  • @lex_darlog_fun
    @lex_darlog_fun Рік тому +5

    Just as I was about to suggest a video on async, James announced it himself. 👍🏻
    Can't wait to see this convoluted topic explained in mCoding simple comprehensible manner.

  • @DebashishGhoshOfficial
    @DebashishGhoshOfficial Рік тому

    "Thank you, next" was a nice touch.

  • @MessLeadingProgramming
    @MessLeadingProgramming Рік тому +14

    Great video. It was eye opening for me when I learnt about generator comprehension. I realised that I was doing something very inefficient passing list comprehensions to sum and other functions.
    Also worker example is amazing. Never used it this way.

  • @wojasek1223
    @wojasek1223 2 місяці тому

    Thank you so much for this video, and all of others. I've started reading Fluent Python a couple months ago, but that was quite hard for me to go through it. And you on your channel describe those hard for me things and I finally get them somehow. Thought I was dumb, but all i needed was to find a great lecturer. Thank you so much!

  • @trag1czny
    @trag1czny Рік тому +7

    craving for the async vid 🤤

  • @TylerLarson
    @TylerLarson Рік тому +8

    Yep, definitely interested in an async video. Especially interested in learning the "python native" async features and components so as to detangle it from all the third-party contributed stuff.

  • @pa1nk1ller14
    @pa1nk1ller14 Рік тому +1

    Your videos are going into great depth mate! Im awaiting for that async vid of yours

  • @jewpcabra666
    @jewpcabra666 Рік тому +2

    always love the videos - would love an async video! Always learn a little tidbit from these

  • @technowey
    @technowey Рік тому +1

    Thank you for another great video.
    I’ve been using generators for years, and still didn’t know some of this.

  • @modest_supreme
    @modest_supreme Рік тому

    Thank you for this! Excellent deep dives. Your videos are a great source for understanding the why/how behind functionality.

  • @murphygreen8484
    @murphygreen8484 Рік тому +1

    Made me realize how much I still need to learn. Great video!

  • @yxh
    @yxh Рік тому +1

    I would def like a video going deeper into "yield from" generator uses, with examples

  • @FlorianLinscheid
    @FlorianLinscheid Рік тому +1

    Didn't know about generator chaining, that sounded very useful! Thanks

  • @Cookie-mv2hg
    @Cookie-mv2hg Рік тому +2

    Every coding courses of yours it like math classes where you start at 1+1 and a simple zone out and suddenly you're on advanced mathematics.

  • @andrewstribling4385
    @andrewstribling4385 4 місяці тому

    Nice work! I cannot wait to start using these generator techniques!

  • @ashishjain518
    @ashishjain518 Рік тому

    I probably only got 20% of this video. But it was enough for me to fiddle around and learn more about generators' daily use cases to improve my performance...
    Great video, Mcoding 😄

  • @vidlb
    @vidlb Рік тому +2

    Thank you ! And yes for the async video

  • @redon638
    @redon638 Рік тому

    Thanks! I always learn something new and really impressive watching your videos. Wish you twice as much subs

  • @CrYpt001
    @CrYpt001 Рік тому +1

    Finally something about generators. Never quite got them

  • @blacky7801
    @blacky7801 Рік тому +2

    You can pass things into a generator? Wow, incredible video!

  • @dmdeemer
    @dmdeemer Рік тому +2

    Watched this video because I'm like, "I know what generators are, but I bet I'll learn something new about them." Found out that yield is an expression. Mind blown. Not disappointed.
    Please make the async video.

  • @mistervallus185
    @mistervallus185 Рік тому

    literally just had to learn about generators 2 days ago for a proj. the video timing is immaculate

  • @MoritzWallis
    @MoritzWallis Рік тому +2

    Super informative video, thank you, very interesting

  • @ren200758
    @ren200758 Рік тому

    didn't know about the generator pipeline and was blown away by it. big hype for the async video!

  • @vt2788
    @vt2788 Рік тому

    Really advanced high value stuff! Thanks!

  • @AByteofCode
    @AByteofCode Рік тому +1

    Very nice CTA at the end, hadn't noticed it before, clever :)
    Otherwise great video and can't wait to know how async uses generators, I've been curious about that ever since you mentioned it a while ago.

  • @LastTigerEyes
    @LastTigerEyes Рік тому +2

    I really appreciate your videos. I always learn something new, even when I don't think I will. TIL parenthesis make generator comprehension. :)

  • @krimsonsun10
    @krimsonsun10 Рік тому

    ALL hail @mcoding High Priest of the Python temple!! Your explanations are succinct, and the usage examples help me so much to grasp the concepts. Thank you.

  • @dixonstroi
    @dixonstroi Рік тому

    I think this will really help me with lazy execution via generators. This would have really helped if . Also, 'yield from' was hard for me to get from just the docs, so thanks for summing that up tidily.

  • @macedmondson782
    @macedmondson782 Рік тому

    I'm really liking your videos! I would love to see an async video from you!

  • @mattlau04
    @mattlau04 Рік тому

    Great video as always! And would love to see a video on async

  • @jullien191
    @jullien191 Рік тому

    Muy buen video. Gracias amigo

  • @mytalala
    @mytalala Рік тому

    looking forward for async video, great job

  • @endoflevelboss
    @endoflevelboss Рік тому

    Looking forward to the async video 👍🥳

  • @MrTyty527
    @MrTyty527 Рік тому

    I can't wait for the async video!

  • @StrangeArrow
    @StrangeArrow Рік тому

    Super Content. Thanks for sharing with us 🥰🥰

  • @mayank8387
    @mayank8387 Рік тому

    Dude you're amazing! Thanks for sharing.

  • @knut-olaihelgesen3608
    @knut-olaihelgesen3608 Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much. This was a very confusing topic.

  • @PetrSzturc
    @PetrSzturc Рік тому +1

    I watched quite few videos about async but I would still like your take as well. It is one of the more complicated/complex? parts of the language to grasp.

  • @martinc.7424
    @martinc.7424 Рік тому

    I was just told that list comprehension where faster than for loops... now it makes sense.

  • @aditya95sriram
    @aditya95sriram Рік тому

    That generator pipeline was eye-opening! I've worked with generators plenty, but still this pipeline idea escaped me

  • @adamstrejcovsky8257
    @adamstrejcovsky8257 Рік тому +1

    when I feel on top of the world with my python knowledge, I go here to restore humility :D

  • @AngryArmadillo
    @AngryArmadillo Рік тому

    Looking forward to the asyncio video!

  • @hotmole7621
    @hotmole7621 Рік тому +1

    when i started python, i was so proud of my prime number generator function

  • @klaasvaak2575
    @klaasvaak2575 Рік тому

    not just imagination or/and downloadspeed but also your pride deciding what you appropriate from the interwebs or what you painstakingly program yourself in most likely a less efficient methode.

  • @ciCCapROSTi
    @ciCCapROSTi Рік тому

    Good stuff, I didn't know most of the advanced stuff here.

  • @AIRLZ6
    @AIRLZ6 3 місяці тому +1

    damn i need to watch this video over and over again :D. Love it!

  • @darske1
    @darske1 Рік тому

    Plot twist: The 1 Gb file you're trying to read, has only 1 line xD
    Awesome video. The send method confuses me a lot every time I see it, I don't know why lol

  • @HonsHon
    @HonsHon 5 місяців тому

    Helped me refactor some code and provide some memory savings! Thank you!

  • @nassehk
    @nassehk Рік тому

    Great videos pall. Please make that async video.

  • @BR-lx7py
    @BR-lx7py Рік тому

    @9:08 It's crazy that you can even have the same name for the generator comprehensions, so all of them called "nums".

  • @taylorbreutzmann6034
    @taylorbreutzmann6034 Рік тому +2

    It’s crazy, being able to tell how intelligent another human is just behind a screen/video.

  • @MichalPlichta
    @MichalPlichta Рік тому

    Wow I thought I know almost everything about generators, but i was wrong! Well done!

    • @mCoding
      @mCoding  Рік тому

      There's always more to learn!

    • @Plann
      @Plann Рік тому

      Same.

  • @gormster
    @gormster Рік тому +1

    No, I don’t want a video on asyncio. I want a whole goddamn *series.*

    • @mCoding
      @mCoding  Рік тому +1

      Take note of how I'm methodically making videos on all the prerequisites for a deep async discussion 🙃

    • @khalilhadji6489
      @khalilhadji6489 Рік тому

      @@mCoding can't wait, i am facing some issue in one of my projects and understanding how asyncio works inside out would be very helpfull

  • @BR-lx7py
    @BR-lx7py Рік тому

    This video is definitely eye-opening. I thought that generators were just regular functions that you could re-enter, but I never comprehended how python calls them totally differently. Adding something like "if False: yield" to a regular function totally changes how it is called, despite those 2 lines of code being a noop.

  • @evolagenda
    @evolagenda Рік тому

    Fantastic

  • @laurentmichel4565
    @laurentmichel4565 Рік тому

    I would enjoy a video about asyncio a lot

  • @cloppingemu1471
    @cloppingemu1471 Рік тому

    Look forward to an async video

  • @JohnFallot
    @JohnFallot Рік тому

    Let’s go Patronssss

  • @mjdevlog
    @mjdevlog Рік тому

    So useful, even yhough i don't understand the last half of the video. Maybe one day i will😅

  • @StephenBuergler
    @StephenBuergler 11 місяців тому

    Do you think it would be a good idea for the else clause in the for/in/else loop to be the place where the generator's returned value is made available?

  • @dane2565
    @dane2565 Рік тому

    Yes please and thank you

  • @alexsere3061
    @alexsere3061 5 місяців тому

    "Did you really think they would add a new keyword just to abbreviate a for loop?"
    This is python so yes, yes I did

  • @arcstur
    @arcstur Рік тому

    I am async awaiting for the video on async!

  • @varkenvarken
    @varkenvarken Рік тому +1

    Would it be possible to quantify the actual memory usage of the generator pipelines shown vs list based versions? Is there some debug option or memory profiler for this? [Edit]... bit of searching later, i think scalene might be an interesting option

  • @abdussametturker
    @abdussametturker Рік тому

    Awesome

  • @greasedweasel8087
    @greasedweasel8087 Рік тому +1

    Can you do a video on making __iter__ a generator vs defining a __next__? I’ve seen both in the wild, you seem preferential to the __iter__ generator, and I’ve googled to no avail. I’m mostly interested in which one is more pythonic, but I’d also like to know what you think the use cases for each are. Great videos!

  • @anibaldk
    @anibaldk Рік тому +1

    You cannot see this (hopefully) but I had to give a standing ovation to this one.

    • @mCoding
      @mCoding  Рік тому +2

      I saw it!

    • @anibaldk
      @anibaldk Рік тому

      @@mCoding 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱

  • @dmitrylitovchenko2365
    @dmitrylitovchenko2365 Рік тому +1

    In collatz generator checking for n == 1 should be at the top otherwise it behaves funny with input of 1: [4, 2, 1] :)

    • @mCoding
      @mCoding  Рік тому

      Good catch! Yes you are absolutely right.

  • @spaghettiking653
    @spaghettiking653 Рік тому +2

    4:44 what is this _make method you call? I wasn't expecting this code to run, but it still did, even though it doesn't appear you defined the method? Is this something generated by dataclass?

    • @NostraDavid2
      @NostraDavid2 Рік тому +2

      Note that MyDataPoint class is the type NamedTuple. I googled for "_make NamedTuple Python" and got some info on the function. Turns out that _make is part of the NamedTuple class.

    • @NostraDavid2
      @NostraDavid2 Рік тому +1

      Also note that's its a NamedTuple and not a data class. This just means that you have different functions that you can use. So no comparison, like you do with data classes. You CAN do it, but you'll have to implement it yourself.

    • @spaghettiking653
      @spaghettiking653 Рік тому +1

      @@NostraDavid2 I see, thanks for pointing it out. So, I'm not sure why I thought it was a dataclass, but I guess I just saw the type annotations and didn't read the top part. That makes a lott more sense, big thanks :)

  • @morrispearl9981
    @morrispearl9981 Рік тому

    I am a fan of generators. I use "yield from" when the function that generates the next thing happens to be recursive. For example, I have a generator that takes a list of N things, and yields each permutation of those N things, and the underlying algorithm is recursive.

  • @samuelthecamel
    @samuelthecamel Рік тому

    Start of video: Ah yes, this is a cool useful Python feature that I didn't know about!
    End of video: What is even going on

    • @mCoding
      @mCoding  Рік тому +1

      Haha welcome to my channel! A lot of my videos are guilty of this. I try to make the beginning accessible to everyone but then by the end I'm covering technical details and esoteric use cases that experts get held up on.

    • @samuelthecamel
      @samuelthecamel Рік тому

      @@mCoding no problem man, it's nice that anyone at any skill level can learn something from these videos

  • @kylwatson9240
    @kylwatson9240 2 місяці тому

    Now if only I was doing something complex enough to merit this new found tool in my python bag... One day

  • @Blubberland
    @Blubberland Рік тому

    Thumbs up.
    4:27 This might be a rather be a problem of spell-checking settings than on syntax.

  • @quintencabo
    @quintencabo Рік тому

    Finally!!!

  • @Thr0nSK
    @Thr0nSK Рік тому +1

    Man you killed it with the Ariana Grande 😂😂

  • @efperel
    @efperel Рік тому

    Yield from is great for trees and other recursive traversals

  • @zacharyreilly7307
    @zacharyreilly7307 Рік тому +1

    Please make an async video!! I would love it if you included best practices for incorporating async into sync func/programs
    I find most times i need something async i want to do sync stuff too or dont know how to convert it all to async

  • @_veikkomies
    @_veikkomies Рік тому +1

    Yes please on the async. It's a confusing feature for me

  • @con-f-use
    @con-f-use Рік тому

    > "Do you think, they would really introduce a whole new set of keywords just to have a shortened for-loop?"
    Yes. The answer is "Yes, I can see the Python devs do that."

  • @farpurple
    @farpurple Рік тому

    ~~I got my dose of dopamine~~
    Thanks you, but i should watch more times/try in code to understand yield and yield from returns, h, im still on way to switch to rust but python is so interesting!

  • @oshavlfarms7239
    @oshavlfarms7239 Рік тому

    It's like a clockwork function. Every time it's called the cog moves a tick.

  • @stacymaimoon4189
    @stacymaimoon4189 Рік тому

    I was impressed.
    Just one observation: if you try to debug an example (I did it with example_composable()) and you want to see what happens with the data in the generator after each step,
    transforming the generator to a list (I am using PyCharm), you will be surprised to discover that the list (and the generator itself)
    is empty after the very first conversion (and all subsequent generator steps as well).
    The example runs in execution mode, but delivers wrong results if you debug. I have not found a suitable means to overcome this limitation, so far. Do you have any presentable idea?

  • @drrros
    @drrros Рік тому

    Vote for asyncio video! That would be really awesome!

  • @RoamingAdhocrat
    @RoamingAdhocrat Рік тому

    What typeface is your editor using? I covet those flat-top 3s

    • @mCoding
      @mCoding  Рік тому

      That's the default font in PyCharm, JetBrains Mono.