here's a solution based on pypy's library code (thanks to agf's suggestion in the comments).
the state is available via the .state
attribute and can be reset via .goto(state)
where state
is an index into the sequence (starting at 0). there's a demo at the end (you need to scroll down, i'm afraid).
this is way faster than discarding values.
> cat prod.py
class product(object):
def __init__(self, *args, **kw):
if len(kw) > 1:
raise TypeError("product() takes at most 1 argument (%d given)" %
len(kw))
self.repeat = kw.get('repeat', 1)
self.gears = [x for x in args] * self.repeat
self.num_gears = len(self.gears)
self.reset()
def reset(self):
# initialization of indicies to loop over
self.indicies = [(0, len(self.gears[x]))
for x in range(0, self.num_gears)]
self.cont = True
self.state = 0
def goto(self, n):
self.reset()
self.state = n
x = self.num_gears
while n > 0 and x > 0:
x -= 1
n, m = divmod(n, len(self.gears[x]))
self.indicies[x] = (m, self.indicies[x][1])
if n > 0:
self.reset()
raise ValueError("state exceeded")
def roll_gears(self):
# Starting from the end of the gear indicies work to the front
# incrementing the gear until the limit is reached. When the limit
# is reached carry operation to the next gear
self.state += 1
should_carry = True
for n in range(0, self.num_gears):
nth_gear = self.num_gears - n - 1
if should_carry:
count, lim = self.indicies[nth_gear]
count += 1
if count == lim and nth_gear == 0:
self.cont = False
if count == lim:
should_carry = True
count = 0
else:
should_carry = False
self.indicies[nth_gear] = (count, lim)
else:
break
def __iter__(self):
return self
def next(self):
if not self.cont:
raise StopIteration
l = []
for x in range(0, self.num_gears):
index, limit = self.indicies[x]
l.append(self.gears[x][index])
self.roll_gears()
return tuple(l)
p = product('abc', '12')
print list(p)
p.reset()
print list(p)
p.goto(2)
print list(p)
p.goto(4)
print list(p)
> python prod.py
[('a', '1'), ('a', '2'), ('b', '1'), ('b', '2'), ('c', '1'), ('c', '2')]
[('a', '1'), ('a', '2'), ('b', '1'), ('b', '2'), ('c', '1'), ('c', '2')]
[('b', '1'), ('b', '2'), ('c', '1'), ('c', '2')]
[('c', '1'), ('c', '2')]
you should test it more - i may have made a dumb mistake - but the idea is quite simple, so you should be able to fix it :o) you're free to use my changes; no idea what the original pypy licence is.
also state
isn't really the full state - it doesn't include the original arguments - it's just an index into the sequence. maybe it would have been better to call it index, but there are already indici[sic]es in the code...
update
here's a simpler version that is the same idea but works by transforming a sequence of numbers. so you just imap
it over count(n)
to get the sequence offset by n
.
> cat prod2.py
from itertools import count, imap
def make_product(*values):
def fold((n, l), v):
(n, m) = divmod(n, len(v))
return (n, l + [v[m]])
def product(n):
(n, l) = reduce(fold, values, (n, []))
if n > 0: raise StopIteration
return tuple(l)
return product
print list(imap(make_product(['a','b','c'], [1,2,3]), count()))
print list(imap(make_product(['a','b','c'], [1,2,3]), count(3)))
def product_from(n, *values):
return imap(make_product(*values), count(n))
print list(product_from(4, ['a','b','c'], [1,2,3]))
> python prod2.py
[('a', 1), ('b', 1), ('c', 1), ('a', 2), ('b', 2), ('c', 2), ('a', 3), ('b', 3), ('c', 3)]
[('a', 2), ('b', 2), ('c', 2), ('a', 3), ('b', 3), ('c', 3)]
[('b', 2), ('c', 2), ('a', 3), ('b', 3), ('c', 3)]
(the downside here is that if you want to stop and restart you need to have kept track yourself of how many you have used)