james_027 wrote: > Hi, > > On Aug 1, 5:18 pm, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> On Wed, 01 Aug 2007 09:06:42 +0000, james_027 wrote: >>> for example I have this method >>> def my_method(): >>> # do something >>> # how do I get the name of this method which is my_method here? >> Why do you need this? There are ways but those are not really good for >> production code. >> > > I am going to use this in Django. I am trying to implement a > permission here, where in the database store the methods that the user > are allowed to execute. for example if the method is def > create_event(): the method will look for create_event in the database > to see if it allow to be execute.
This might help, I used it for a similar need I had in the past where I needed a method to know the name it was called with class TestClass: def __init__(self): pass def __getattr__(self, name): try: return getattr(self.__class__, name) except AttributeError: return functools.partial(self.foo, name) def foo(self, name, **args): print name for i in args: print " %s=%s" % (i, args[i]) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list