tri.named-struct

tri.named-struct supplies a class that can be used like dictionaries (or via attribute access), but with a predefined set of possible key values


Keywords
tri, named-struct
License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install tri.named-struct==0.6.0

Documentation

https://travis-ci.org/TriOptima/tri.named-struct.svg?branch=master http://codecov.io/github/TriOptima/tri.named-struct/coverage.svg?branch=master

tri.named_struct

tri.named_struct supplies classes that can be used like dictionaries, but with a predefined set of possible key values.

Example

from tri_named_struct import NamedStruct

class MyNamedStruct(NamedStruct):
    foo = NamedStructField()
    bar = NamedStructField()

m = MyNamedStruct(17, 42)
assert m['foo'] == 17
assert m.foo == 17
assert m == dict(foo=17, bar=42)

m.not_foo  # Will raise an AttributeError

Default values can be provided:

from tri_named_struct import NamedStruct

class MyNamedStruct(NamedStruct):
    foo = NamedStructField()
    bar = NamedStructField()
    baz = NamedStructField(default='default')

assert MyNamedStruct(17) == dict(foo=17, bar=None, baz='default')

Default values can alternatively be provided by a factory method:

from tri_named_struct import NamedStruct

class MyNamedStruct(NamedStruct):
    foo = NamedStructField(default_factory=list)

assert MyNamedStruct().foo == []

There is also a functional way to defined a NamedStruct subclass:

from tri_named_struct import named_struct

MyNamedStruct = named_struct('foo, bar')
m = MyNamedStruct(17, 42)
assert m.foo == 17
assert m.bar == 42

Running tests

You need tox installed then just make test.

License

BSD

Documentation

http://trinamed_struct.readthedocs.org.