ÿØÿàJFIFÿþ ÿÛC       ÿÛC ÿÀÿÄÿÄ"#QrÿÄÿÄ&1!A"2qQaáÿÚ ?Øy,æ/3JæÝ¹È߲؋5êXw²±ÉyˆR”¾I0ó2—PI¾IÌÚiMö¯–þrìN&"KgX:Šíµ•nTJnLK„…@!‰-ý ùúmë;ºgµŒ&ó±hw’¯Õ@”Ü— 9ñ-ë.²1<yà‚¹ïQÐU„ہ?.’¦èûbß±©Ö«Âw*VŒ) `$‰bØÔŸ’ëXÖ-ËTÜíGÚ3ð«g Ÿ§¯—Jx„–’U/ÂÅv_s(Hÿ@TñJÑãõçn­‚!ÈgfbÓc­:él[ðQe 9ÀPLbÃãCµm[5¿ç'ªjglå‡Ûí_§Úõl-;"PkÞÞÁQâ¼_Ñ^¢SŸx?"¸¦ùY騐ÒOÈ q’`~~ÚtËU¹CڒêV  I1Áß_ÿÙ A[c@`sdZddlmZmZmZddlZddlmZejsej Z ej Z ddl mZejZdddd gZn6ddlZej Z ej Z ejZejZgZdS( s This module is designed to be used as follows:: from future.builtins.iterators import * And then, for example:: for i in range(10**15): pass for (a, b) in zip(range(10**15), range(-10**15, 0)): pass Note that this is standard Python 3 code, plus some imports that do nothing on Python 3. The iterators this brings in are:: - ``range`` - ``filter`` - ``map`` - ``zip`` On Python 2, ``range`` is a pure-Python backport of Python 3's ``range`` iterator with slicing support. The other iterators (``filter``, ``map``, ``zip``) are from the ``itertools`` module on Python 2. On Python 3 these are available in the module namespace but not exported for * imports via __all__ (zero no namespace pollution). Note that these are also available in the standard library ``future_builtins`` module on Python 2 -- but not Python 3, so using the standard library version is not portable, nor anywhere near complete. i(tdivisiontabsolute_importtprint_functionN(tutils(tnewrangetfiltertmaptrangetzip(t__doc__t __future__RRRt itertoolstfutureRtPY3tifilterRtimapRt future.typesRRtizipRt__all__tbuiltins(((sJ/opt/alt/python27/lib/python2.7/site-packages/future/builtins/iterators.pyt!s