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Functional Python Programming
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The built-in iter() function creates an iterator over a collection object. We can use this to wrap an iterator object around a collection. In many cases, we'll allow the for statement to handle this implicitly. In a few cases, we might want to create an iterator explicitly so that we can separate the head from the tail of a collection. This function can also iterate through the values created by a callable or function until a sentinel value is found. This feature is sometimes used with the read() function of a file to consume rows until some sentinel value is found. In this case, the given function might be some file's readline() method. Providing a callable function to iter() is a bit hard for us because this function must maintain state internally. This hidden state is a feature of an open file, for example, each read() or readline() function advances some internal state to the next character or next line.
Another example of this is the way that...
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