Steven Bethard wrote:
I'd like to be able to have an instance variable that can sometimes be accessed as a property, and sometimes as a regular value, e.g. something like:

If you want the behaviour to be switchable per-instance, you have to go the route of always running through the property machinery, since property() creates a descriptor on the class, not the instance.


On the other hand, if you want to switch the behaviour of every instance, then making usevalue and usefunc class methods may give you some mileage.

I'm rather curious about your use case, though. . .

Here's a different way of using the property machinery, too:

Py> class C(object):
...   def __init__(self):
...     self._use_val = None
...   def useval(self, x):
...     self._val = x
...     self._use_val = True
...   def usefunc(self, func, *args, **kwds):
...     self._func, self._args, self._kwds = (func, args, kwds)
...   def _get(self):
...     use_val = self._use_val
...     if use_val is None:
...       raise AttributeError('x')
...     if use_val:
...       return self._val
...     else:
...       return self._func(*self._args, **self._kwds)
...   x = property(_get)
...
Py> c = C()
Py> c.useval(4)
Py> c.x
4
Py> c.usefunc(list)
Py> c.x
[]

--
Nick Coghlan   |   [EMAIL PROTECTED]   |   Brisbane, Australia
---------------------------------------------------------------
            http://boredomandlaziness.skystorm.net
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to