> Yes, that's what makes it not zero-copy.
Yeah, so you'd have to pass around the `BytesIO` instead.
I know that zero-copy doesn't ordinarily mean what I described, but that seemed to be how TFA was using it, based on the logic in the rest of the sentence.
> Yeah, so you'd have to pass around the `BytesIO` instead.
That wouldn’t be zero-copy either: BytesIO is an I/O abstraction over a buffer, so it intentionally masks the “lifetime” of the original buffer. In effect, reading from the BytesIO creates new copies of the underlying data by design, in new `bytes` objects.
(This is actually a great capsule example of why zero-copy design is difficult in Python: the Pythonic thing to do is to make lots of bytes/string/rich objects as you parse, each of which owns its data, which in turn means copies everywhere.)