On Sun, Aug 24, 2014 at 8:49 AM, luofeiyu <elearn2...@gmail.com> wrote: > class Person(object): > def addProperty(self, attribute): > getter = lambda self: self._getProperty(attribute) > setter = lambda self, value: self._setProperty(attribute, > value) > deletter = lambda self:self.delProperty(attribute) > setattr(self.__class__, attribute, > property(fget=getter,fset=setter,fdel=deletter,doc="Auto-generated method")) > def _setProperty(self, attribute, value): > setattr(self, '_' + attribute, value.title()) > def _getProperty(self, attribute): > return getattr(self, '_' + attribute) > def delProperty(self,attribute): > delattr(self,'_' + attribute)
Look. Forget properties. Python is not Java or C++, and you almost never need this kind of thing. Read up a tutorial on doing classes Python's way, and you'll find that all this sort of thing just doesn't matter. You've come here with a significant number of questions about properties, and it looks as if you're trying to do everything through them - which is utterly and completely useless, especially when you use properties to be as dynamic as you're doing. Just don't do it. ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list