2005/11/24, Liam Clarke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > What do you mean enabled? > > If it's imported into the namespace you can call it... > > Err, can you clarify on the enabling, what context are you using it > in, and what are you trying to achieve?
Hi, sorry. I'll try to present the actors omitting the details. table.txt: the first line is an header that lists all the table's fields. Following lines represent data; skel.py: it is script that get headers in table.txt and write the module mymodule.py; mymodule.py: it is a skeleton where are defined a number of functions. This number depends on the number of headers, and it may vary (different table.txt files have a different number of headers, which a different name too). Each function in the module has the name of an header. Finally there is another script, modifiers.py: it imports all the functions in mymodule and applies these functions to the corresponding fields. AS I don't want to apply all these functions indistinctly, I need a way to mark a function like enabled or disabled. If it is enabled, it will be invoked. It it results disabled, it won't be called (and thus, the corresponding field won't be modified). I don't know if it makes sense to you, I should explain better the whole flow.. However I don't think it is the right place. Anyway, I hope the scenario is a bit more free from clouds! Thanks _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor