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Home/ Questions/Q 743723
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T08:53:47+00:00 2026-05-14T08:53:47+00:00

I use MySQLdb a lot when dealing with my webserver. I often find myself

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I use MySQLdb a lot when dealing with my webserver. I often find myself repeating the lines:

row = cursor.fetchone()
while row:
    do_processing(row)
    row = cursor.fetchone()

Somehow this strikes me as somewhat un-pythonic. Is there a better, one-line way to accomplish the same thing, along the lines of inline assignment in C:

while (row = do_fetch()) { 
    do_processing(row); 
} 

I’ve tried figuring out the syntax using list comprehensions, but I can’t seem to figure it out. Any recommendations?

Thanks,

Erik

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T08:53:47+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:53 am

    There isn’t really a way to get list comprehensions involved in this. You need a loop that terminates when a sentinel value is returned. Fortunately, Python does provide this:

    for row in iter(cursor.fetchone, None):
        process(row)
    

    The two-argument iter() takes a callable, and a sentinel value that will terminate the iteration. It is a little isoteric, so few people will complain if you instead use the still somewhat more common:

    while True:
        row = cursor.fetchone()
        if row is None:
            break
        process(row)
    

    (And indeed that style was common even for reading a file line-by-line, before we had generalized iteration.)

    Some DB-API modules (including apparently now MySQLdb) also make cursors directly iterable, like so:

    for row in cursor:
        process(row)
    

    That’s obviously the prettiest solution, when available 🙂

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