I'm trying to mull over a good solution to this and nothing is coming to mind. As an exercise, I'm trying to create a context manager that will handle data validation, something like:
validation = lambda x: len(x) <= 10
with validator(validation):
some_data = input("Please enter a name of 10 characters or less: ")
print(some_data)
# OUTPUT
>> Please enter a name of 10 characters or less: FooBarSpamEggs
>> Please enter a name of 10 characters of less: Adam
Adam
Originally I thought about doing this with unittest.mock.patch
but I realized I can't call the original function while it's patched, e.g.:
def patched(validation, *args):
while True:
p = __builtins__.input(args) # Doesn't work
if validation(p):
break
return p
with unittest.mock.patch('builtins.input', patched):
input("Some prompt here: ")
# fails on recursion error as patched calls itself
Then I considered writing a decorator to validate a single line, but that's really only useful if you could do something like:
@validate(lambda x: int(x) == 6)
p = input("How many sides does a d6 have? ")
# can't decorate a function call
I'm hung up on this context manager idea, however. Unfortunately I don't know if a context manager has any access to its contents, or if it's limited only to its arguments. Any thoughts?
As an aside, I know I could render this functionality in a function e.g.:
def validate_input(prompt, validation, msg_if_fail=None):
while True:
p = input(prompt)
if validation(p):
break
if msg_if_fail is not None:
print(msg_if_fail)
return p
But it's not as pretty. This is, as I said, an exercise more than a practical problem.
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