The first takes 0 or more arguments, each an iterable, the second one takes one argument which is expected to produce the iterables:
from itertools import chain
chain(list1, list2, list3)
iterables = [list1, list2, list3]
chain.from_iterable(iterables)
but iterables
can be any iterator that yields the iterables:
def gen_iterables():
for i in range(10):
yield range(i)
itertools.chain.from_iterable(gen_iterables())
Using the second form is usually a case of convenience, but because it loops over the input iterables lazily, it is also the only way you can chain an infinite number of finite iterators:
def gen_iterables():
while True:
for i in range(5, 10):
yield range(i)
chain.from_iterable(gen_iterables())
The above example will give you a iterable that yields a cyclic pattern of numbers that will never stop, but will never consume more memory than what a single range()
call requires.
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