While investigating Ruby I came across this to create a simple Struct-like class:
Person = Struct.new(:forname, :surname)
person1 = Person.new('John', 'Doe')
puts person1 #<struct Person forname="John", surname="Doe">
Which raised a few Python questions for me. I have written a [VERY] basic clone of this mechanism in Python:
def Struct(*args):
class NewStruct:
def __init__(self):
for arg in args:
self.__dict__[arg] = None
return NewStruct
>>> Person = Struct('forename', 'surname')
>>> person1 = Person()
>>> person2 = Person()
>>> person1.forename, person1.surname = 'John','Doe'
>>> person2.forename, person2.surname = 'Foo','Bar'
>>> person1.forename
'John'
>>> person2.forename
'Foo'
Is there already a similar mechanism in Python to handle this? (I usually just use dictionaries).
How would I get the Struct()
function to create the correct __init__()
arguments. (in this case I would like to perform person1 = Person('John', 'Doe')
Named Arguments if possible: person1 = Person(surname='Doe', forename='John')
I Would like, as a matter of interest, to have Question 2 answered even if there is a better Python mechanism to do this.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…