I could not find any valid example on the internet where I can see the difference between them and why to choose one over the other.
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.
I could not find any valid example ... where I can see the difference between them [
chainandchain.from_iterable] and why to choose one over the other
The accepted answer is thorough. For those seeking a quick application, consider flattening several lists:
list(itertools.chain(["a", "b", "c"], ["d", "e"], ["f"])) # ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'] You may wish to reuse these lists later, so you make an iterable of lists:
iterable = (["a", "b", "c"], ["d", "e"], ["f"]) Attempt
However, passing in an iterable to chain gives an unflattened result:
list(itertools.chain(iterable)) # [['a', 'b', 'c'], ['d', 'e'], ['f']] Why? You passed in one item (a tuple). chain needs each list separately.
Solutions
When possible, you can unpack an iterable:
list(itertools.chain(*iterable)) # ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'] list(itertools.chain(*iter(iterable))) # ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'] More generally, use .from_iterable (as it also works with infinite iterators):
list(itertools.chain.from_iterable(iterable)) # ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'] g = itertools.chain.from_iterable(itertools.cycle(iterable)) next(g) # "a"
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