Since rwproperty appears to use descriptors just like regular property(), you'd do it the same way as for any normal attribute, namely:
#for reading print foo.y #is the same as print getattr(foo, "y") #for writing foo.x = 1 #is the same as setattr(foo, "x", 1) Cheers, Chris -- Follow the path of the Iguana... http://rebertia.com On Fri, Oct 17, 2008 at 9:36 AM, Митя <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I use rwproperty (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/rwproperty/1.0) and so I > have properties in my class. Also I have a list of names of properties > wich I am to set. How can I access my properties by name in such way > that when I want to set a property, setter will be called, and and > when I want to read it - getter? > > I have something like this: > > class Film(object): > def __init__(self, title): > self.__title = title > > @getproperty > def title(self): > return self.__title > @setproperty > def title(self, value): > self.__title = value > > properties_to_set = ['title'] > f = Film('aaa') > > I d want to have sth like: > f(properties_to_set[0]) = 'bbb' > > If title was a simple variable I could write: > f.__dict__[properties_to_set[0]] = 'bbb' > > now I can write: > f.__dict__['_Film__' + properties_to_set[0]] = 'bbb' > > but I want to set my property through the provided setter. How can I > do this? > > P.S. Sorry for my english > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list