On Wed, 29 May 2013 12:46:19 -0500, Croepha wrote: > Is there anything like this in the standard library? > > class AnyFactory(object): > def __init__(self, anything): > self.product = anything > def __call__(self): > return self.product > def __repr__(self): > return "%s.%s(%r)" % (self.__class__.__module__, > self.__class__.__name__, self.product) > > my use case is: > collections.defaultdict(AnyFactory(collections.defaultdict( > AnyFactory(None))))
That's not a use-case. That's a code snippet. What does it mean? Why would you write such an ugly thing? What does it do? I get a headache just looking at it. I *think* it's a defaultdict that returns a defaultdict on KeyError, where the *second* defaultdict returns None. from collections import defaultdict defaultdict(lambda: defaultdict(lambda: None)) looks more reasonable to me. I don't know why you need to wrap such a simple pair of functions in a class. This is not Java. http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com.au/2006/03/execution-in-kingdom-of-nouns.html (Twice in one day I have linked to this.) I'm not sure why you care about the repr of the "AnythingFactory" object. You stuff it directly into the defaultdict, where you are very unlikely to need to inspect it. You only ever see the defaultdicts they return, and they already have a nice repr. -- Steven -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list