Version History¶
8.1.0¶
- Bug fixes
partition()works withpred=Noneagain. (thanks to MSeifert04)
- New itertools
sample()(thanks to tommyod)nth_or_last()(thanks to d-ryzhikov)
- Changes to existing itertools:
The implementation for
divide()was improved. (thanks to jferard)
8.0.2¶
- Bug fixes
The type stub files are now part of the wheel distribution (thanks to keisheiled)
8.0.1¶
- Bug fixes
The type stub files now work for functions imported from the root package (thanks to keisheiled)
8.0.0¶
- New itertools and other additions
This library now ships type hints for use with mypy. (thanks to ilai-deutel for the implementation, and to gabbard and fmagin for assistance)
split_when()(thanks to jferard)repeat_last()(thanks to d-ryzhikov)
- Changes to existing itertools:
The implementation for
set_partitions()was improved. (thanks to jferard)partition()was optimized for expensive predicates. (thanks to stevecj)unique_everseen()andgroupby_transform()were re-factored. (thanks to SergBobrovsky)The implementation for
difference()was improved. (thanks to Jabbey92)
- Other changes
Python 3.4 has reached its end of life and is no longer supported.
Python 3.8 is officially supported. (thanks to jdufresne)
The
collatefunction has been deprecated. It raises aDeprecationWarningif used, and will be removed in a future release.one()andonly()now provide more informative error messages. (thanks to gabbard)Unit tests were moved outside of the main package (thanks to jdufresne)
Various documentation fixes (thanks to kriomant, gabbard, jdufresne)
7.2.0¶
- New itertools
set_partitions()(thanks to kbarrett)
7.1.0¶
- New itertools
ichunked()(thanks davebelais and youtux)only()(thanks jaraco)
- Changes to existing itertools:
numeric_range()now supports ranges specified bydatetime.datetimeanddatetime.timedeltaobjects (thanks to MSeifert04 for tests).difference()now supports an initial keyword argument.
- Other changes
Various documentation fixes (thanks raimon49, pylang)
7.0.0¶
- New itertools:
partitions()(thanks to rominf and Saluev)substrings_indexes()(thanks to rominf)
- Changes to existing itertools:
collapse()now treatsbytesobjects the same asstrobjects. (thanks to Sweenpet)
The major version update is due to the change in the default behavior of
collapse(). It now treats bytes objects the same as str objects.
This aligns its behavior with always_iterable().
>>> from more_itertools import collapse
>>> iterable = [[1, 2], b'345', [6]]
>>> print(list(collapse(iterable)))
[1, 2, b'345', 6]
6.0.0¶
- Major changes:
Python 2.7 is no longer supported. The 5.0.0 release will be the last version targeting Python 2.7.
All future releases will target the active versions of Python 3. As of 2019, those are Python 3.4 and above.
The
sixlibrary is no longer a dependency.The
accumulate()function is no longer part of this library. You may import a better version from the standarditertoolsmodule.
- Changes to existing itertools:
The order of the parameters in
grouper()have changed to match the latest recipe in the itertools documentation. Use of the old order will be supported in this release, but emit aDeprecationWarning. The legacy behavior will be dropped in a future release. (thanks to jaraco)distinct_permutations()was improved (thanks to jferard - see also permutations with unique values at StackOverflow.)An unused parameter was removed from
substrings(). (thanks to pylang)
- Other changes:
The docs for
unique_everseen()were improved. (thanks to jferard and MSeifert04)Several Python 2-isms were removed. (thanks to jaraco, MSeifert04, and hugovk)
5.0.0¶
- New itertools:
split_into()(thanks to rovyko)unzip()(thanks to bmintz)substrings()(thanks to pylang)
- Changes to existing itertools:
ilen()was optimized a bit (thanks to MSeifert04, achampion, and bmintz)first_true()now returnsNoneby default. This is the reason for the major version bump - see below. (thanks to sk and OJFord)
- Other changes:
Some code for old Python versions was removed (thanks to hugovk)
Some documentation mistakes were corrected (thanks to belm0 and hugovk)
Tests now run properly on 32-bit versions of Python (thanks to Millak)
Newer versions of CPython and PyPy are now tested against
The major version update is due to the change in the default return value of
first_true(). It’s now None.
>>> from more_itertools import first_true
>>> iterable = [0, '', False, [], ()] # All these are False
>>> answer = first_true(iterable)
>>> print(answer)
None
4.3.0¶
4.2.0¶
- New itertools:
map_reduce()(thanks to pylang)prepend()(from the Python 3.7 docs)
- Improvements to existing itertools:
bucket()now complies with PEP 479 (thanks to irmen)
- Other changes:
Python 3.7 is now supported (thanks to irmen)
Python 3.3 is no longer supported
The test suite no longer requires third-party modules to run
The API docs now include links to source code
4.1.0¶
- New itertools:
split_at()(thanks to michael-celani)circular_shifts()(thanks to hiqua)make_decorator()- see the blog post Yo, I heard you like decorators for a tour (thanks to pylang)always_reversible()(thanks to michael-celani)nth_combination()(from the Python 3.7 docs)
- Improvements to existing itertools:
seekable()now has anelementsmethod to return cached items.The performance tradeoffs between
roundrobin()andinterleave_longest()are now documented (thanks michael-celani, pylang, and MSeifert04)
4.0.1¶
No code changes - this release fixes how the docs display on PyPI.
4.0.0¶
- New itertools:
consecutive_groups()(Based on the example in the Python 2.4 docs)seekable()(If you’re looking for how to “reset” an iterator, you’re in luck!)exactly_n()(thanks to michael-celani)run_length.encode()andrun_length.decode()
- Improvements to existing itertools:
The number of items between filler elements in
intersperse()can now be specified (thanks to pylang)distinct_permutations()andpeekable()got some minor adjustments (thanks to MSeifert04)always_iterable()now returns an iterator object. It also now allows different types to be considered iterable (thanks to jaraco)bucket()can now limit the keys it stores in memoryone()now allows for custom exceptions (thanks to kalekundert)
- Other changes:
A few typos were fixed (thanks to EdwardBetts)
All tests can now be run with
python setup.py test
The major version update is due to the change in the return value of always_iterable().
It now always returns iterator objects:
>>> from more_itertools import always_iterable
# Non-iterable objects are wrapped with iter(tuple(obj))
>>> always_iterable(12345)
<tuple_iterator object at 0x7fb24c9488d0>
>>> list(always_iterable(12345))
[12345]
# Iterable objects are wrapped with iter()
>>> always_iterable([1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
<list_iterator object at 0x7fb24c948c50>
3.2.0¶
- Improvements to existing itertools:
Some bugs with slicing
peekable()-wrapped iterables were fixed
3.1.0¶
- New itertools:
numeric_range()(Thanks to BebeSparkelSparkel and MSeifert04)count_cycle()(Thanks to BebeSparkelSparkel)locate()(Thanks to pylang and MSeifert04)
- Improvements to existing itertools:
A few itertools are now slightly faster due to some function optimizations. (Thanks to MSeifert04)
The docs have been substantially revised with installation notes, categories for library functions, links, and more. (Thanks to pylang)
3.0.0¶
- Removed itertools:
contexthas been removed due to a design flaw - see below for replacement options. (thanks to NeilGirdhar)
- Improvements to existing itertools:
side_effectnow supportsbeforeandafterkeyword arguments. (Thanks to yardsale8)
PyPy and PyPy3 are now supported.
The major version change is due to the removal of the context function.
Replace it with standard with statement context management:
# Don't use context() anymore
file_obj = StringIO()
consume(print(x, file=f) for f in context(file_obj) for x in u'123')
# Use a with statement instead
file_obj = StringIO()
with file_obj as f:
consume(print(x, file=f) for x in u'123')
2.6.0¶
- New itertools:
adjacentandgroupby_transform(Thanks to diazona)always_iterable(Thanks to jaraco)(Removed in 3.0.0)
context(Thanks to yardsale8)divide(Thanks to mozbhearsum)
- Improvements to existing itertools:
ilenis now slightly faster. (Thanks to wbolster)peekablecan now prepend items to an iterable. (Thanks to diazona)
2.5.0¶
- New itertools:
distribute(Thanks to mozbhearsum and coady)sort_together(Thanks to clintval)staggerandzip_offset(Thanks to joshbode)padded
- Improvements to existing itertools:
peekablenow handles negative indexes and slices with negative components properly.intersperseis now slightly faster. (Thanks to pylang)windowednow accepts astepkeyword argument. (Thanks to pylang)
Python 3.6 is now supported.
2.4.1¶
Move docs 100% to readthedocs.io.
2.4¶
- New itertools:
accumulate,all_equal,first_true,partition, andtailfrom the itertools documentation.bucket(Thanks to Rosuav and cvrebert)collapse(Thanks to abarnet)interleaveandinterleave_longest(Thanks to abarnet)side_effect(Thanks to nvie)sliced(Thanks to j4mie and coady)split_beforeandsplit_after(Thanks to astronouth7303)spy(Thanks to themiurgo and mathieulongtin)
- Improvements to existing itertools:
chunkedis now simpler and more friendly to garbage collection. (Contributed by coady, with thanks to piskvorky)collatenow delegates toheapq.mergewhen possible. (Thanks to kmike and julianpistorius)peekable-wrapped iterables are now indexable and sliceable. Iterating throughpeekable-wrapped iterables is also faster.oneandunique_to_eachhave been simplified. (Thanks to coady)
2.3¶
Added
onefromjaraco.util.itertools. (Thanks, jaraco!)Added
distinct_permutationsandunique_to_each. (Contributed by bbayles)Added
windowed. (Contributed by bbayles, with thanks to buchanae, jaraco, and abarnert)Simplified the implementation of
chunked. (Thanks, nvie!)Python 3.5 is now supported. Python 2.6 is no longer supported.
Python 3 is now supported directly; there is no 2to3 step.
2.2¶
Added
iterateandwith_iter. (Thanks, abarnert!)
2.1¶
Added (tested!) implementations of the recipes from the itertools documentation. (Thanks, Chris Lonnen!)
Added
ilen. (Thanks for the inspiration, Matt Basta!)
2.0¶
chunkednow returns lists rather than tuples. After all, they’re homogeneous. This slightly backward-incompatible change is the reason for the major version bump.Added
@consumer.Improved test machinery.
1.1¶
Added
firstfunction.Added Python 3 support.
Added a default arg to
peekable.peek().Noted how to easily test whether a peekable iterator is exhausted.
Rewrote documentation.
1.0¶
Initial release, with
collate,peekable, andchunked. Could really use better docs.