Shofel2_T124_python/venv/lib/python3.10/site-packages/first.py

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2024-05-25 16:45:07 +00:00
## -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
first
=====
first is the function you always missed in Python.
In the simplest case, it returns the first true element from an iterable:
>>> from first import first
>>> first([0, False, None, [], (), 42])
42
Or None if there is none:
>>> from first import first
>>> first([]) is None
True
>>> first([0, False, None, [], ()]) is None
True
It also supports the passing of a key argument to help selecting the first
match in a more advanced way.
>>> from first import first
>>> first([1, 1, 3, 4, 5], key=lambda x: x % 2 == 0)
4
:copyright: (c) 2012 by Hynek Schlawack.
:license: MIT, see LICENSE for more details.
"""
__title__ = 'first'
__version__ = '2.0.2'
__author__ = 'Hynek Schlawack'
__license__ = 'MIT'
__copyright__ = 'Copyright 2012 Hynek Schlawack'
def first(iterable, default=None, key=None):
"""
Return first element of `iterable` that evaluates true, else return None
(or an optional default value).
>>> first([0, False, None, [], (), 42])
42
>>> first([0, False, None, [], ()]) is None
True
>>> first([0, False, None, [], ()], default='ohai')
'ohai'
>>> import re
>>> m = first(re.match(regex, 'abc') for regex in ['b.*', 'a(.*)'])
>>> m.group(1)
'bc'
The optional `key` argument specifies a one-argument predicate function
like that used for `filter()`. The `key` argument, if supplied, must be
in keyword form. For example:
>>> first([1, 1, 3, 4, 5], key=lambda x: x % 2 == 0)
4
"""
if key is None:
for el in iterable:
if el:
return el
else:
for el in iterable:
if key(el):
return el
return default