| 1 | # This contains most of the executable examples from Guido's descr
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| 2 | # tutorial, once at
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| 3 | #
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| 4 | # http://www.python.org/2.2/descrintro.html
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| 5 | #
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| 6 | # A few examples left implicit in the writeup were fleshed out, a few were
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| 7 | # skipped due to lack of interest (e.g., faking super() by hand isn't
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| 8 | # of much interest anymore), and a few were fiddled to make the output
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| 9 | # deterministic.
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| 10 |
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| 11 | from test.test_support import sortdict
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| 12 | import pprint
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| 13 |
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| 14 | class defaultdict(dict):
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| 15 | def __init__(self, default=None):
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| 16 | dict.__init__(self)
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| 17 | self.default = default
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| 18 |
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| 19 | def __getitem__(self, key):
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| 20 | try:
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| 21 | return dict.__getitem__(self, key)
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| 22 | except KeyError:
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| 23 | return self.default
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| 24 |
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| 25 | def get(self, key, *args):
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| 26 | if not args:
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| 27 | args = (self.default,)
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| 28 | return dict.get(self, key, *args)
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| 29 |
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| 30 | def merge(self, other):
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| 31 | for key in other:
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| 32 | if key not in self:
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| 33 | self[key] = other[key]
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| 34 |
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| 35 | test_1 = """
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| 36 |
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| 37 | Here's the new type at work:
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| 38 |
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| 39 | >>> print defaultdict # show our type
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| 40 | <class 'test.test_descrtut.defaultdict'>
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| 41 | >>> print type(defaultdict) # its metatype
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| 42 | <type 'type'>
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| 43 | >>> a = defaultdict(default=0.0) # create an instance
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| 44 | >>> print a # show the instance
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| 45 | {}
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| 46 | >>> print type(a) # show its type
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| 47 | <class 'test.test_descrtut.defaultdict'>
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| 48 | >>> print a.__class__ # show its class
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| 49 | <class 'test.test_descrtut.defaultdict'>
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| 50 | >>> print type(a) is a.__class__ # its type is its class
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| 51 | True
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| 52 | >>> a[1] = 3.25 # modify the instance
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| 53 | >>> print a # show the new value
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| 54 | {1: 3.25}
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| 55 | >>> print a[1] # show the new item
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| 56 | 3.25
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| 57 | >>> print a[0] # a non-existant item
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| 58 | 0.0
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| 59 | >>> a.merge({1:100, 2:200}) # use a dict method
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| 60 | >>> print sortdict(a) # show the result
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| 61 | {1: 3.25, 2: 200}
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| 62 | >>>
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| 63 |
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| 64 | We can also use the new type in contexts where classic only allows "real"
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| 65 | dictionaries, such as the locals/globals dictionaries for the exec
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| 66 | statement or the built-in function eval():
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| 67 |
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| 68 | >>> def sorted(seq):
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| 69 | ... seq.sort()
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| 70 | ... return seq
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| 71 | >>> print sorted(a.keys())
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| 72 | [1, 2]
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| 73 | >>> exec "x = 3; print x" in a
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| 74 | 3
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| 75 | >>> print sorted(a.keys())
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| 76 | [1, 2, '__builtins__', 'x']
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| 77 | >>> print a['x']
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| 78 | 3
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| 79 | >>>
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| 80 |
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| 81 | Now I'll show that defaultdict instances have dynamic instance variables,
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| 82 | just like classic classes:
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| 83 |
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| 84 | >>> a.default = -1
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| 85 | >>> print a["noway"]
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| 86 | -1
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| 87 | >>> a.default = -1000
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| 88 | >>> print a["noway"]
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| 89 | -1000
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| 90 | >>> 'default' in dir(a)
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| 91 | True
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| 92 | >>> a.x1 = 100
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| 93 | >>> a.x2 = 200
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| 94 | >>> print a.x1
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| 95 | 100
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| 96 | >>> d = dir(a)
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| 97 | >>> 'default' in d and 'x1' in d and 'x2' in d
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| 98 | True
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| 99 | >>> print sortdict(a.__dict__)
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| 100 | {'default': -1000, 'x1': 100, 'x2': 200}
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| 101 | >>>
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| 102 | """
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| 103 |
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| 104 | class defaultdict2(dict):
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| 105 | __slots__ = ['default']
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| 106 |
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| 107 | def __init__(self, default=None):
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| 108 | dict.__init__(self)
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| 109 | self.default = default
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| 110 |
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| 111 | def __getitem__(self, key):
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| 112 | try:
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| 113 | return dict.__getitem__(self, key)
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| 114 | except KeyError:
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| 115 | return self.default
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| 116 |
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| 117 | def get(self, key, *args):
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| 118 | if not args:
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| 119 | args = (self.default,)
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| 120 | return dict.get(self, key, *args)
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| 121 |
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| 122 | def merge(self, other):
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| 123 | for key in other:
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| 124 | if key not in self:
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| 125 | self[key] = other[key]
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| 126 |
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| 127 | test_2 = """
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| 128 |
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| 129 | The __slots__ declaration takes a list of instance variables, and reserves
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| 130 | space for exactly these in the instance. When __slots__ is used, other
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| 131 | instance variables cannot be assigned to:
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| 132 |
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| 133 | >>> a = defaultdict2(default=0.0)
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| 134 | >>> a[1]
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| 135 | 0.0
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| 136 | >>> a.default = -1
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| 137 | >>> a[1]
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| 138 | -1
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| 139 | >>> a.x1 = 1
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| 140 | Traceback (most recent call last):
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| 141 | File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
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| 142 | AttributeError: 'defaultdict2' object has no attribute 'x1'
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| 143 | >>>
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| 144 |
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| 145 | """
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| 146 |
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| 147 | test_3 = """
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| 148 |
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| 149 | Introspecting instances of built-in types
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| 150 |
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| 151 | For instance of built-in types, x.__class__ is now the same as type(x):
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| 152 |
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| 153 | >>> type([])
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| 154 | <type 'list'>
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| 155 | >>> [].__class__
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| 156 | <type 'list'>
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| 157 | >>> list
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| 158 | <type 'list'>
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| 159 | >>> isinstance([], list)
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| 160 | True
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| 161 | >>> isinstance([], dict)
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| 162 | False
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| 163 | >>> isinstance([], object)
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| 164 | True
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| 165 | >>>
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| 166 |
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| 167 | Under the new proposal, the __methods__ attribute no longer exists:
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| 168 |
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| 169 | >>> [].__methods__
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| 170 | Traceback (most recent call last):
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| 171 | File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
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| 172 | AttributeError: 'list' object has no attribute '__methods__'
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| 173 | >>>
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| 174 |
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| 175 | Instead, you can get the same information from the list type:
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| 176 |
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| 177 | >>> pprint.pprint(dir(list)) # like list.__dict__.keys(), but sorted
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| 178 | ['__add__',
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| 179 | '__class__',
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| 180 | '__contains__',
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| 181 | '__delattr__',
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| 182 | '__delitem__',
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| 183 | '__delslice__',
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| 184 | '__doc__',
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| 185 | '__eq__',
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| 186 | '__ge__',
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| 187 | '__getattribute__',
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| 188 | '__getitem__',
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| 189 | '__getslice__',
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| 190 | '__gt__',
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| 191 | '__hash__',
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| 192 | '__iadd__',
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| 193 | '__imul__',
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| 194 | '__init__',
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| 195 | '__iter__',
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| 196 | '__le__',
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| 197 | '__len__',
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| 198 | '__lt__',
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| 199 | '__mul__',
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| 200 | '__ne__',
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| 201 | '__new__',
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| 202 | '__reduce__',
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| 203 | '__reduce_ex__',
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| 204 | '__repr__',
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| 205 | '__reversed__',
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| 206 | '__rmul__',
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| 207 | '__setattr__',
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| 208 | '__setitem__',
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| 209 | '__setslice__',
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| 210 | '__str__',
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| 211 | 'append',
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| 212 | 'count',
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| 213 | 'extend',
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| 214 | 'index',
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| 215 | 'insert',
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| 216 | 'pop',
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| 217 | 'remove',
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| 218 | 'reverse',
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| 219 | 'sort']
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| 220 |
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| 221 | The new introspection API gives more information than the old one: in
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| 222 | addition to the regular methods, it also shows the methods that are
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| 223 | normally invoked through special notations, e.g. __iadd__ (+=), __len__
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| 224 | (len), __ne__ (!=). You can invoke any method from this list directly:
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| 225 |
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| 226 | >>> a = ['tic', 'tac']
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| 227 | >>> list.__len__(a) # same as len(a)
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| 228 | 2
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| 229 | >>> a.__len__() # ditto
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| 230 | 2
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| 231 | >>> list.append(a, 'toe') # same as a.append('toe')
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| 232 | >>> a
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| 233 | ['tic', 'tac', 'toe']
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| 234 | >>>
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| 235 |
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| 236 | This is just like it is for user-defined classes.
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| 237 | """
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| 238 |
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| 239 | test_4 = """
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| 240 |
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| 241 | Static methods and class methods
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| 242 |
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| 243 | The new introspection API makes it possible to add static methods and class
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| 244 | methods. Static methods are easy to describe: they behave pretty much like
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| 245 | static methods in C++ or Java. Here's an example:
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| 246 |
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| 247 | >>> class C:
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| 248 | ...
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| 249 | ... @staticmethod
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| 250 | ... def foo(x, y):
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| 251 | ... print "staticmethod", x, y
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| 252 |
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| 253 | >>> C.foo(1, 2)
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| 254 | staticmethod 1 2
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| 255 | >>> c = C()
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| 256 | >>> c.foo(1, 2)
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| 257 | staticmethod 1 2
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| 258 |
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| 259 | Class methods use a similar pattern to declare methods that receive an
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| 260 | implicit first argument that is the *class* for which they are invoked.
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| 261 |
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| 262 | >>> class C:
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| 263 | ... @classmethod
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| 264 | ... def foo(cls, y):
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| 265 | ... print "classmethod", cls, y
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| 266 |
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| 267 | >>> C.foo(1)
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| 268 | classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
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| 269 | >>> c = C()
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| 270 | >>> c.foo(1)
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| 271 | classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
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| 272 |
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| 273 | >>> class D(C):
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| 274 | ... pass
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| 275 |
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| 276 | >>> D.foo(1)
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| 277 | classmethod test.test_descrtut.D 1
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| 278 | >>> d = D()
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| 279 | >>> d.foo(1)
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| 280 | classmethod test.test_descrtut.D 1
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| 281 |
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| 282 | This prints "classmethod __main__.D 1" both times; in other words, the
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| 283 | class passed as the first argument of foo() is the class involved in the
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| 284 | call, not the class involved in the definition of foo().
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| 285 |
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| 286 | But notice this:
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| 287 |
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| 288 | >>> class E(C):
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| 289 | ... @classmethod
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| 290 | ... def foo(cls, y): # override C.foo
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| 291 | ... print "E.foo() called"
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| 292 | ... C.foo(y)
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| 293 |
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| 294 | >>> E.foo(1)
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| 295 | E.foo() called
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| 296 | classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
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| 297 | >>> e = E()
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| 298 | >>> e.foo(1)
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| 299 | E.foo() called
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| 300 | classmethod test.test_descrtut.C 1
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| 301 |
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| 302 | In this example, the call to C.foo() from E.foo() will see class C as its
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| 303 | first argument, not class E. This is to be expected, since the call
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| 304 | specifies the class C. But it stresses the difference between these class
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| 305 | methods and methods defined in metaclasses (where an upcall to a metamethod
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| 306 | would pass the target class as an explicit first argument).
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| 307 | """
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| 308 |
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| 309 | test_5 = """
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| 310 |
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| 311 | Attributes defined by get/set methods
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| 312 |
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| 313 |
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| 314 | >>> class property(object):
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| 315 | ...
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| 316 | ... def __init__(self, get, set=None):
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| 317 | ... self.__get = get
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| 318 | ... self.__set = set
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| 319 | ...
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| 320 | ... def __get__(self, inst, type=None):
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| 321 | ... return self.__get(inst)
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| 322 | ...
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| 323 | ... def __set__(self, inst, value):
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| 324 | ... if self.__set is None:
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| 325 | ... raise AttributeError, "this attribute is read-only"
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| 326 | ... return self.__set(inst, value)
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| 327 |
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| 328 | Now let's define a class with an attribute x defined by a pair of methods,
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| 329 | getx() and and setx():
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| 330 |
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| 331 | >>> class C(object):
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| 332 | ...
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| 333 | ... def __init__(self):
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| 334 | ... self.__x = 0
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| 335 | ...
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| 336 | ... def getx(self):
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| 337 | ... return self.__x
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| 338 | ...
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| 339 | ... def setx(self, x):
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| 340 | ... if x < 0: x = 0
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| 341 | ... self.__x = x
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| 342 | ...
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| 343 | ... x = property(getx, setx)
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| 344 |
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| 345 | Here's a small demonstration:
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| 346 |
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| 347 | >>> a = C()
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| 348 | >>> a.x = 10
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| 349 | >>> print a.x
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| 350 | 10
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| 351 | >>> a.x = -10
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| 352 | >>> print a.x
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| 353 | 0
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| 354 | >>>
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| 355 |
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| 356 | Hmm -- property is builtin now, so let's try it that way too.
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| 357 |
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| 358 | >>> del property # unmask the builtin
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| 359 | >>> property
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| 360 | <type 'property'>
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| 361 |
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| 362 | >>> class C(object):
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| 363 | ... def __init__(self):
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| 364 | ... self.__x = 0
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| 365 | ... def getx(self):
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| 366 | ... return self.__x
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| 367 | ... def setx(self, x):
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| 368 | ... if x < 0: x = 0
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| 369 | ... self.__x = x
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| 370 | ... x = property(getx, setx)
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| 371 |
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| 372 |
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| 373 | >>> a = C()
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| 374 | >>> a.x = 10
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| 375 | >>> print a.x
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| 376 | 10
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| 377 | >>> a.x = -10
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| 378 | >>> print a.x
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| 379 | 0
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| 380 | >>>
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| 381 | """
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| 382 |
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| 383 | test_6 = """
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| 384 |
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| 385 | Method resolution order
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| 386 |
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| 387 | This example is implicit in the writeup.
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| 388 |
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| 389 | >>> class A: # classic class
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| 390 | ... def save(self):
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| 391 | ... print "called A.save()"
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| 392 | >>> class B(A):
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| 393 | ... pass
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| 394 | >>> class C(A):
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| 395 | ... def save(self):
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| 396 | ... print "called C.save()"
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| 397 | >>> class D(B, C):
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| 398 | ... pass
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| 399 |
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| 400 | >>> D().save()
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| 401 | called A.save()
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| 402 |
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| 403 | >>> class A(object): # new class
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| 404 | ... def save(self):
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| 405 | ... print "called A.save()"
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| 406 | >>> class B(A):
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| 407 | ... pass
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| 408 | >>> class C(A):
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| 409 | ... def save(self):
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| 410 | ... print "called C.save()"
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| 411 | >>> class D(B, C):
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| 412 | ... pass
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| 413 |
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| 414 | >>> D().save()
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| 415 | called C.save()
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| 416 | """
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| 417 |
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| 418 | class A(object):
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| 419 | def m(self):
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| 420 | return "A"
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| 421 |
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| 422 | class B(A):
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| 423 | def m(self):
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| 424 | return "B" + super(B, self).m()
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| 425 |
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| 426 | class C(A):
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| 427 | def m(self):
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| 428 | return "C" + super(C, self).m()
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| 429 |
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| 430 | class D(C, B):
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| 431 | def m(self):
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| 432 | return "D" + super(D, self).m()
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| 433 |
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| 434 |
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| 435 | test_7 = """
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| 436 |
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| 437 | Cooperative methods and "super"
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| 438 |
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| 439 | >>> print D().m() # "DCBA"
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| 440 | DCBA
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| 441 | """
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| 442 |
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| 443 | test_8 = """
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| 444 |
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| 445 | Backwards incompatibilities
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| 446 |
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| 447 | >>> class A:
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| 448 | ... def foo(self):
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| 449 | ... print "called A.foo()"
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| 450 |
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| 451 | >>> class B(A):
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| 452 | ... pass
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| 453 |
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| 454 | >>> class C(A):
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| 455 | ... def foo(self):
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| 456 | ... B.foo(self)
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| 457 |
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| 458 | >>> C().foo()
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| 459 | Traceback (most recent call last):
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| 460 | ...
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| 461 | TypeError: unbound method foo() must be called with B instance as first argument (got C instance instead)
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| 462 |
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| 463 | >>> class C(A):
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| 464 | ... def foo(self):
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| 465 | ... A.foo(self)
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| 466 | >>> C().foo()
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| 467 | called A.foo()
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| 468 | """
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| 469 |
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| 470 | __test__ = {"tut1": test_1,
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| 471 | "tut2": test_2,
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| 472 | "tut3": test_3,
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| 473 | "tut4": test_4,
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| 474 | "tut5": test_5,
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| 475 | "tut6": test_6,
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| 476 | "tut7": test_7,
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| 477 | "tut8": test_8}
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| 478 |
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| 479 | # Magic test name that regrtest.py invokes *after* importing this module.
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| 480 | # This worms around a bootstrap problem.
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| 481 | # Note that doctest and regrtest both look in sys.argv for a "-v" argument,
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| 482 | # so this works as expected in both ways of running regrtest.
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| 483 | def test_main(verbose=None):
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| 484 | # Obscure: import this module as test.test_descrtut instead of as
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| 485 | # plain test_descrtut because the name of this module works its way
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| 486 | # into the doctest examples, and unless the full test.test_descrtut
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| 487 | # business is used the name can change depending on how the test is
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| 488 | # invoked.
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| 489 | from test import test_support, test_descrtut
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| 490 | test_support.run_doctest(test_descrtut, verbose)
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| 491 |
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| 492 | # This part isn't needed for regrtest, but for running the test directly.
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| 493 | if __name__ == "__main__":
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| 494 | test_main(1)
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