On Feb 23, 2015, at 7:29 AM, "Frank Millman" <fr...@chagford.com> wrote:

> 
> "Cem Karan" <cfkar...@gmail.com> wrote in message 
> news:a3c11a70-5846-4915-bb26-b23793b65...@gmail.com...
>> 
>> 
>> Good questions!  That was why I was asking about 'gotchas' with WeakSets 
>> originally.  Honestly, the only way to know for sure would be to write two 
>> APIs for doing similar things, and then see how people react to them.  The 
>> problem is, how do you set up such a study so it is statistically valid?
>> 
> 
> Just in case you missed Steven's comment on my 'gotcha', and my reply, it is 
> worth repeating that what I reported as a gotcha was not what it seemed.
> 
> If you set up the callback as a weakref, and the listening object goes out 
> of scope, it will wait to be garbage collected. However, as far as I can 
> tell, the weakref is removed at the same time as the object is gc'd, so 
> there is no 'window' where the weakref exists but the object it is 
> referencing does not exist.
> 
> My problem was that I had performed a cleanup operation on the listening 
> object before letting it go out of scope, and it was no longer in a valid 
> state to deal with the callback, resulting in an error. If you do not have 
> that situation, your original idea may well work.

Thank you Frank, I did read Steve's comment to your reply earlier, but what you 
said in your original reply made sense to me.  I don't have control over user 
code.  That means that if someone wants to write code such that they perform 
some kind of cleanup and are no longer able to handle the callback, they are 
free to do so.  While I can't prevent this from happening, I can make it as 
obvious as possible in my code that before you perform any cleanup, you also 
need to unregister from the library.  That is my main goal in developing 
pythonic/obvious methods of registering callbacks.

Thanks,
Cem Karan
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