Chainz is a lightweight library to provide chaining, functional methods to iterables.
To install: pip install chainz
Basic example:
from chainz import Chain
Chain(xrange(10))\
.map(lambda x: x + 1)\
.filter(lambda x: x % 2 == 0)\
.omit(lambda x: x % 3 == 0)\
.reduce(lambda x, y: x + y)
# 30The fundamental class in chainz is Chain, which accepts an iterable as an
argument to its constructor. It is itself an iterable, just exposing the
supplied iterable. It exposes functional methods like map,
filter, and flatten, which return the chain so as to be chainable. These
methods alter the chain; chain.map(f) is the same as chain = chain.map(f).
Some methods, such as reduce and for_each, are "sinks", in that they
consume the iterable. These methods do not return the chain, to make it
clear that once they are called, the chain is done.
All non-sink methods are lazy, so they don't result in any evaluation. Only
by using a sink method, or consuming the iterable in another way (such as
list(chain) or [x for x in chain]), do you actually evaluate the iterable.
You can think of Chain as a way to wrap itertools in a more chainable fashion.
By default, a Chain will stop whenever there's an exception. Often that is
not what you want. When you are processing a long list of items (something
for which Chain was specifically created for), you just want to note what
went wrong, and move on to the next item. The method on_error allows just
that. It takes a function f(exception, object) which itself takes two
parameter. The first parameter is the raised exception. The second parameter
is the object that caused the exception.
def handle_error(exception, obj):
print("%s caused exception: %s" % (obj, exception))
def double(x):
if x == 1:
raise Exception('Bad')
return x*2
chain = Chain(xrange(3)).on_error(handle_error).map(double)
list(chain)
# "1 caused exception: Exception('Bad')"
# [0, 2]Please see the docs/ directory for auto-generated (and thus up-to-date)
documentation. This is generated from the doc strings, so introspection
can also be helpful (eg, print Chain.reduce.__doc__).