Re: how to deepcopy a slice object?
thx for all the help simon. good ideas i can work with. thx again. alex. Simon Forman wrote: Alexandre Guimond wrote: Here is my reason: I have an object that contrains a 2D regular grid (matrix). In this regular grid, I place points at regular intervals. In essence, i have something like (my code is obviously more complex, this is just to show what I want to do) obj.grid = numpy.zeros( ( 100, 100 ) ) obj.grid[ obj.y1: obj.y2 : obj.ys, obj.x1 : obj.x2 : obj.xs ] = embedded_parameters result = somefunc( obj.grid ) My goal was to reduce the number of elements in my obj object by replacing y1, y2, ys, and x1, x2, xs by 2 slice objects, and then do: obj.grid[ obj.slicey, obj.slicex ] = embedded_parameters But when I do this and then try to deepcopy my object, it doesn't work, as in the example below. Its not a big thing. I just liked the idea of having less elements in my obj class and actually modeling my slice concept by a slice object, specially since i'm going to 3D and 4D grid, and its somewhat annoying to carry so many indices in my class definition. Simon Forman wrote: Alexandre Guimond wrote: Hi all, i'm trying to deepcopy a slice object but i get the following error. Does anyone know a workaround? ActivePython 2.4.3 Build 12 (ActiveState Software Inc.) based on Python 2.4.3 (#69, Apr 11 2006, 15:32:42) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information. import copy copy.deepcopy( slice( 1, 10, 2 ) ) Traceback (most recent call last): File stdin, line 1, in ? File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 204, in deepcopy y = _reconstruct(x, rv, 1, memo) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 336, in _reconstruct y = callable(*args) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy_reg.py, line 92, in __newobj__ return cls.__new__(cls, *args) TypeError: slice expected at least 1 arguments, got 0 thx for any help. Why would you want to [deep]copy a slice object? Anyway, I don't know much about them, other than that they are slightly unusual objects that play a very restricted role in python, rather like the Ellipsis. Workarounds are possible, I think, but really you almost certainly don't need to do this. Peace, ~Simon Ah, so you *do* want to deepcopy slice objects.. Neat. :-) I can't do that, but I can show you a couple of ways to deepcopy objects that have slices as attributes. First, if the __init__() method and its args are sufficient to recreate your objects then you could do something like this: class DeepCopyable0: def __init__(self, x, y, z, a, b, c): self.slicex = slice(x, y, z) self.slicey = slice(a, b, c) def __deepcopy__(self, memo): # Create local vars for brevity. sx, sy = self.slicex, self.slicey # Create a new DeepCopyable0 instance. return DeepCopyable0( sx.start, sx.stop, sx.step, sy.start, sy.stop, sy.step ) | d0 = DeepCopyable0(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) | d0.slicex, d0.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) | d1 = deepcopy(d0) | d1.slicex, d1.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) Otherwise, another way to do it would be to provide the pickling protocol: class DeepCopyable1: def __init__(self, x, y, z, a, b, c): # Pretend this was something more complicated. self.slicex = slice(x, y, z) self.slicey = slice(a, b, c) def __getstate__(self): state = self.__dict__.copy() # Create local vars for brevity. sx, sy = self.slicex, self.slicey # Save the indices rather than the slices. state['slicex'] = sx.start, sx.stop, sx.step state['slicey'] = sy.start, sy.stop, sy.step return state def __setstate__(self, state): # Recreate the slice objects. state['slicex'] = slice(*state['slicex']) state['slicey'] = slice(*state['slicey']) self.__dict__.update(state) | d0 = DeepCopyable1(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) | d0.slicex, d0.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) | d1 = deepcopy(d0) | d1.slicex, d1.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) Circular references seem work fine here too. Observe: | d0 = DeepCopyable1(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) | d0.rec = d0 | d0 delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d5cb2c | d0.rec.rec #etc... delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d5cb2c | d1 = deepcopy(d0) | d1 delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d7878c | d1.rec delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d7878c Since you're going to be using more dimensions, you could make python do the work for you rather than cutting and pasting: class DeepCopyable2: # __init__() omitted... def __getstate__(self): state = self.__dict__.copy() # Keep track of the slice attributes
Re: how to deepcopy a slice object?
Alexandre Guimond wrote: thx for all the help simon. good ideas i can work with. thx again. alex. You're very welcome, a pleasure. ;-) ~Simon -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: how to deepcopy a slice object?
Alexandre Guimond wrote: Hi all, i'm trying to deepcopy a slice object but i get the following error. Does anyone know a workaround? ActivePython 2.4.3 Build 12 (ActiveState Software Inc.) based on Python 2.4.3 (#69, Apr 11 2006, 15:32:42) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information. import copy copy.deepcopy( slice( 1, 10, 2 ) ) Traceback (most recent call last): File stdin, line 1, in ? File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 204, in deepcopy y = _reconstruct(x, rv, 1, memo) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 336, in _reconstruct y = callable(*args) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy_reg.py, line 92, in __newobj__ return cls.__new__(cls, *args) TypeError: slice expected at least 1 arguments, got 0 thx for any help. Why would you want to [deep]copy a slice object? Anyway, I don't know much about them, other than that they are slightly unusual objects that play a very restricted role in python, rather like the Ellipsis. Workarounds are possible, I think, but really you almost certainly don't need to do this. Peace, ~Simon -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: how to deepcopy a slice object?
Here is my reason: I have an object that contrains a 2D regular grid (matrix). In this regular grid, I place points at regular intervals. In essence, i have something like (my code is obviously more complex, this is just to show what I want to do) obj.grid = numpy.zeros( ( 100, 100 ) ) obj.grid[ obj.y1: obj.y2 : obj.ys, obj.x1 : obj.x2 : obj.xs ] = embedded_parameters result = somefunc( obj.grid ) My goal was to reduce the number of elements in my obj object by replacing y1, y2, ys, and x1, x2, xs by 2 slice objects, and then do: obj.grid[ obj.slicey, obj.slicex ] = embedded_parameters But when I do this and then try to deepcopy my object, it doesn't work, as in the example below. Its not a big thing. I just liked the idea of having less elements in my obj class and actually modeling my slice concept by a slice object, specially since i'm going to 3D and 4D grid, and its somewhat annoying to carry so many indices in my class definition. Simon Forman wrote: Alexandre Guimond wrote: Hi all, i'm trying to deepcopy a slice object but i get the following error. Does anyone know a workaround? ActivePython 2.4.3 Build 12 (ActiveState Software Inc.) based on Python 2.4.3 (#69, Apr 11 2006, 15:32:42) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information. import copy copy.deepcopy( slice( 1, 10, 2 ) ) Traceback (most recent call last): File stdin, line 1, in ? File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 204, in deepcopy y = _reconstruct(x, rv, 1, memo) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 336, in _reconstruct y = callable(*args) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy_reg.py, line 92, in __newobj__ return cls.__new__(cls, *args) TypeError: slice expected at least 1 arguments, got 0 thx for any help. Why would you want to [deep]copy a slice object? Anyway, I don't know much about them, other than that they are slightly unusual objects that play a very restricted role in python, rather like the Ellipsis. Workarounds are possible, I think, but really you almost certainly don't need to do this. Peace, ~Simon -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: how to deepcopy a slice object?
Simon Forman wrote: Why would you want to [deep]copy a slice object? I would guess the original poster actually wanted to copy a data structure which includes a slice object somewhere within it. That is a perfectly reasonable albeit somewhat unusual thing to want, however it doesn't work. Similarly in Python 2.4 you cannot deepcopy functions. That has been fixed in Python 2.5 but I guess nobody has tried deepcopying slices before so they haven't been fixed. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Re: how to deepcopy a slice object?
Alexandre Guimond wrote: Here is my reason: I have an object that contrains a 2D regular grid (matrix). In this regular grid, I place points at regular intervals. In essence, i have something like (my code is obviously more complex, this is just to show what I want to do) obj.grid = numpy.zeros( ( 100, 100 ) ) obj.grid[ obj.y1: obj.y2 : obj.ys, obj.x1 : obj.x2 : obj.xs ] = embedded_parameters result = somefunc( obj.grid ) My goal was to reduce the number of elements in my obj object by replacing y1, y2, ys, and x1, x2, xs by 2 slice objects, and then do: obj.grid[ obj.slicey, obj.slicex ] = embedded_parameters But when I do this and then try to deepcopy my object, it doesn't work, as in the example below. Its not a big thing. I just liked the idea of having less elements in my obj class and actually modeling my slice concept by a slice object, specially since i'm going to 3D and 4D grid, and its somewhat annoying to carry so many indices in my class definition. Simon Forman wrote: Alexandre Guimond wrote: Hi all, i'm trying to deepcopy a slice object but i get the following error. Does anyone know a workaround? ActivePython 2.4.3 Build 12 (ActiveState Software Inc.) based on Python 2.4.3 (#69, Apr 11 2006, 15:32:42) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 Type help, copyright, credits or license for more information. import copy copy.deepcopy( slice( 1, 10, 2 ) ) Traceback (most recent call last): File stdin, line 1, in ? File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 204, in deepcopy y = _reconstruct(x, rv, 1, memo) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy.py, line 336, in _reconstruct y = callable(*args) File C:\Program Files\Python\lib\copy_reg.py, line 92, in __newobj__ return cls.__new__(cls, *args) TypeError: slice expected at least 1 arguments, got 0 thx for any help. Why would you want to [deep]copy a slice object? Anyway, I don't know much about them, other than that they are slightly unusual objects that play a very restricted role in python, rather like the Ellipsis. Workarounds are possible, I think, but really you almost certainly don't need to do this. Peace, ~Simon Ah, so you *do* want to deepcopy slice objects.. Neat. :-) I can't do that, but I can show you a couple of ways to deepcopy objects that have slices as attributes. First, if the __init__() method and its args are sufficient to recreate your objects then you could do something like this: class DeepCopyable0: def __init__(self, x, y, z, a, b, c): self.slicex = slice(x, y, z) self.slicey = slice(a, b, c) def __deepcopy__(self, memo): # Create local vars for brevity. sx, sy = self.slicex, self.slicey # Create a new DeepCopyable0 instance. return DeepCopyable0( sx.start, sx.stop, sx.step, sy.start, sy.stop, sy.step ) | d0 = DeepCopyable0(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) | d0.slicex, d0.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) | d1 = deepcopy(d0) | d1.slicex, d1.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) Otherwise, another way to do it would be to provide the pickling protocol: class DeepCopyable1: def __init__(self, x, y, z, a, b, c): # Pretend this was something more complicated. self.slicex = slice(x, y, z) self.slicey = slice(a, b, c) def __getstate__(self): state = self.__dict__.copy() # Create local vars for brevity. sx, sy = self.slicex, self.slicey # Save the indices rather than the slices. state['slicex'] = sx.start, sx.stop, sx.step state['slicey'] = sy.start, sy.stop, sy.step return state def __setstate__(self, state): # Recreate the slice objects. state['slicex'] = slice(*state['slicex']) state['slicey'] = slice(*state['slicey']) self.__dict__.update(state) | d0 = DeepCopyable1(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) | d0.slicex, d0.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) | d1 = deepcopy(d0) | d1.slicex, d1.slicey (slice(1, 2, 3), slice(4, 5, 6)) Circular references seem work fine here too. Observe: | d0 = DeepCopyable1(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) | d0.rec = d0 | d0 delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d5cb2c | d0.rec.rec #etc... delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d5cb2c | d1 = deepcopy(d0) | d1 delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d7878c | d1.rec delme.DeepCopyable instance at 0xb7d7878c Since you're going to be using more dimensions, you could make python do the work for you rather than cutting and pasting: class DeepCopyable2: # __init__() omitted... def __getstate__(self): state = self.__dict__.copy() # Keep track of the slice attributes slices = state['slices'] = [] # Convert slices to indices. for attr, s in state.items(): if isinstance(s, slice): state[attr] = s.start, s.stop, s.step
Re: how to deepcopy a slice object?
Duncan Booth wrote: Simon Forman wrote: Why would you want to [deep]copy a slice object? I would guess the original poster actually wanted to copy a data structure which includes a slice object somewhere within it. That is a perfectly reasonable albeit somewhat unusual thing to want, however it doesn't work. I figured it was either something like that or something really wacky. :-) Either way I was curious. Similarly in Python 2.4 you cannot deepcopy functions. That has been fixed in Python 2.5 but I guess nobody has tried deepcopying slices before so they haven't been fixed. Shows how unusual it is. Since slice objects appear to be immutable: | s = slice(1) | s slice(None, 1, None) | s.start = 1 Traceback (most recent call last): File stdin, line 1, in ? TypeError: 'slice' object has only read-only attributes (assign to .start) etc... fixing copy and deepcopy for slices would involve adding slice to the tuple in this for statement in copy.py (starts on line 115 in my version Python 2.4.3): for t in (types.NoneType, int, long, float, bool, str, tuple, frozenset, type, xrange, types.ClassType, types.BuiltinFunctionType): d[t] = _copy_immutable and, lower down, around line 214, adding a line like this: d[types.SliceType] = _deepcopy_atomic I think I'll send a patch in in awhile. ;-) Peace, ~Simon -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list