On Jun 25, 2:09 pm, Neil Cerutti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2007-06-25, André <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > Suppose I define a class with a number of variables defined as > > properties. Something like: > > > class MyClass(object): > > > def __init__(self): > > self.some_variable = 42 > > self._a = None > > self._b = "pi" > > > def get_a(self): > > return self._a > > def set_a(self, value): > > self._a = value > > > def get_b(self): > > return self._b > > def set_b(self, value): > > self._b = value > > > a = property(get_a, set_a, None, "a is a property") > > b = property(get_b, set_b, None, "b is a property") > > > Is there a way to write a method that would list automatically > > all the variables defined as a property (say by printing their > > docstring and/ or their value), and only those variables? > > This is off the cuff. There's likely a better way. > > for k, v in MyClass.__dict__.iteritems(): > if isinstance(v, property): > print k, v.__doc__
Thank you, this solved my problem nicely. André > > -- > Neil Cerutti > 22 members were present at the church meeting held at the home of Mrs. Marsha > Crutchfield last evening. Mrs. Crutchfield and Mrs. Rankin sang a duet, The > Lord Knows Why. --Church Bulletin Blooper -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list