In Python 2.6, a class decorator that's also a custom descriptor matches the specs you give:
class InnerClassDescriptor(object):
def __init__(self, cls):
self.cls = cls
def __get__(self, instance, outerclass):
class Wrapper(self.cls):
outer = instance
Wrapper.__name__ = self.cls.__name__
return Wrapper
class Outer(object):
@InnerClassDescriptor
class Inner(object):
def __init__(self):
print self.outer
o = Outer()
i = o.Inner()
print 'Outer is a', type(Outer)
print 'Inner is a', type(o.Inner)
This emits:
<__main__.Outer object at 0x82f90>
Outer is a <type 'type'>
Inner is a <type 'type'>
just to confirm that
o.Inner [[is]] a class object, not
something weird like a closure
as per your peculiar specs. Of course it needs to be a different class each time for reentrancy -- even in a single-threaded world, the following:
o1 = Outer()
o2 = Outer()
i1 = o1.Inner
i2 = o2.Inner
print i1(), i2(), i1(), i2()
should work cleanly, and stashing o1 vs o2 anywhere else than in the classes returned by o1.Inner
vs o2.Inner
(e.g., in TLS) would mean horrible results for this use.
But then you didn't specify "o.Inner
has to be exactly the same class object for every possible o
that's an instance of Outer
", so this code fully meets the specs you did give;-).
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