2008/11/5 Arnaud Delobelle wrote: > (or one could use given=dict(lst=lst, d=d)) > > This would have two advantages: > > * eliminate the rist of keyword argument name collision > * one could put all the 'given' objects in a dictionary and then > 'pickle' expressions as needed using this method. Later pyon.loads > could be passed this dictionary so that the objects can be unpickled > correctly. > > I think this idea is good as it would make it possible to pickle some > objects that contain unpicklable objects just by declaring them as > 'given'. > I think it's reasonable. I will change the interface.
> Also, what happens with types? E.g. > >>>> pyon.dumps([int, float, str]) > > I think it would be good if typenames were considered literals (like > numbers and strings) so that the above returns '[int, float, str]' > (and the same for user-defined types maybe). Yes, pyon can dump types too. One note: default rule for name resolving uses sys._getframe(1).f_globals and sys._getframe(1).f_locals. But you can change name resolver writing you own. For example: >>> class C(object): pass ... >>> pyon.loads("[int,bool,float,C]") [<class 'int'>, <class 'bool'>, <class 'float'>, <class '__main__.C'>] >>> pyon.dumps([int,bool,float,C]) '[int,bool,float,C]' Best regards, Zaur _______________________________________________ Python-3000 mailing list Python-3000@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-3000 Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-3000/archive%40mail-archive.com