Maciej Fijalkowski wrote:
On Thu, Jun 12, 2008 at 2:32 AM, Terry Reedy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
"Scott Dial" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
|| If non-string keys are not allowed in __dict__, then the AddOns library
| should be changed to add another dict to the object of interest to track
| these AddOn instances.
There are three possibilities with respect to __dict__ and non-string keys.
1. All implementations must reject such.
2. Each implementation decides for itself.
3. All implementations must allow such.
Current, CPython does not reject, eliminating 1). Since, as I understand
it, at least 1 other implementation does reject, 3) is also eliminated
until Guido decrees otherwise and such implementation(s) change. This
leaves 2) as the de facto situation, but this could be made clearer in the
docs: "The result of trying to add non-string keys to any __dict__
attribute is implementation defined." This means that portable Python code
must act as if 1) were the case.
This is completely irrelevant. This post is not about assigning
non-string stuff to __dict__ of class which works completely fine.
It's about abusing locals, which are not even given that they'll
modify this dict.
Not withstanding Terry's respond, this is not as off-topic as you make
it out to be. The test case you cited is in fact test this exact
'feature'. And as Terry expounded on it, it was unclear to me whether
that was even of allowed. The only reason the test used locals() was
because it was the only way to insert a non-string key into the class
namespace.
class A:
... locals()[42] = 98
A.__dict__
{'__module__': '__main__', 43: 1, '__doc__': None}
locals() has to be used because __dict__ is unavailable at definition.
class A:
... __dict__[42] = 98
NameError: name '__dict__' is not defined
So, while one can write:
class A: pass
a.__dict__[42] = 98
But that's not quite the same. Nevertheless, it was still unclear
whether there was any pronouncements on non-string keys. Sorry for
wasting your time.
-Scott
--
Scott Dial
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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