> > This may be pretty obvious for most of you: > > > > When I have an object (an instance of a class "Foo") I can access > > attributes via dot notation: > > > > aFoo.bar > > > > however when I have a dictionary > > > > aDict = {"bar":"something"} > > > > I have to write > > > > aDict["bar"] > > > > What if I want to create a datastructure that can be used in dot > > notation without having to create a class, i.e. because those objects > > have no behavior at all? > > > > I know that accessing an instance variable via bracket notation would > > really have to be written as: > > > > aFoo.__dict__['bar'] > > > > but this does not bring me any further, because I would still have to > > plug in that __dict__ thing into my datastructure, which leads us to > > the same question as above. > > > > Can anyone tell me what I am missing here?
What's wrong with creating a dummy class? class data: pass mydata = data( ) mydata.foo = 'foo' mydata.bar = 'bar' print mydata.foo print mydata.bar Daniel -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list