On Friday, Apr 27th 2007 at 14:07 -0700, quoth James Stroud: =>Steven W. Orr wrote: =>> I have two seperate modules doing factory stuff which each have the =>> similar function2: =>> =>> In the ds101 module, def DS101CLASS(mname,data): =>> cname = mname+'DS101' =>> msg_class = globals()[cname] =>> msg = msg_class(data) =>> return msg =>> =>> and in the fdu module, =>> =>> def FDUCLASS(mname,data): =>> cname = mname+'FDU' =>> msg_class = globals()[cname] =>> msg = msg_class(data) =>> return msg =>> =>> I was thinking I'd be clever and create a common function: =>> def procCLASS(mname, objname, data): =>> cname = mname+objname =>> msg_class = globals()[cname] =>> msg = msg_class(data) =>> return msg =>> =>> but the call to globals fouls it all up. Is there a way to write it so =>> that the call to globals can be parameterized to be in the context of a =>> specific module? =>> =>> Also, I need to go the other way, a la, =>> globals()[name] = nclass =>> =>> Is this doable? =>> =>> TIA =>> => =>Why do you need all of the msg_class(es) global? Why not put them into a =>module and import the module where you need them? This would be the =>conventional way to avoid such problems.
The idea is that DS101 is being called in a loop in the ds101 module to create a lot of msg_classes. The same is true for the FDUCLASS function; it creates a lot of classes in a loop. In addition, I have two other functions, almost alike, in two seperate modules (mdefs is a structure with all of the stuff needed to drive the loops) def __InitDS101Classes(): for m in mdefs: mdef = mdefs[m] name = mdefs[m]['name']+'DS101' nclass = new.classobj(name,(DS101,),{}) nclass.mdef = mdef nclass.mid = m globals()[name] = nclass def __InitFDUClasses(): for m in mdefs: mdef = mdefs[m] name = mdefs[m]['name']+'FDU' nclass = new.classobj(name,(FDU,),{}) nclass.mdef = mdef nclass.mid = m globals()[name] = nclass I'm trying to see if by being clever, I can factor out the common code of the four different functions and still end up with what they create ending up in the namespaces where they are intended to reside in. Does this make sense or am I way off base? -- Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have .0. happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ ..0 Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all- 000 individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question? steveo at syslang.net -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list