I have a python module that contains an assignment statement binding a long list of things to a name:
list_of_things = [thing1, thing2, ...] where each thing instantiates class Thing when executed. I send this statement through a socket to a remote module that executes it. The problem is that it takes too long to send the entire statement. Accordingly, I am thinking of a solution that sends the list in chunks. The client then executes each chunk and reassembles the complete list. Thus, I would first send something like: chunk = [thing1, thing2, ... thing10] and then chunk = [thing11, thing12, ... thing20] until all things have been transmitted. At the client end, I would execute each chunk statement and then do list_of_things.append(chunk) The point of this solution is that I can start doing useful work in the client as soon as I receive the first chunk, and the others can arrive in the background and be available by the time I need them. One way I could implement this solution is to execute the statement for the entire list_of_things in the server and then create chunk = [...] statements with the lists filled using the repr of the class. I believe that this solution will work, but it seems a shame to execute the list_of_things statement in the server rather than have the server stupidly handle strings (because executing the statement takes time and because the server currently doesn't understand "Thing"). Should I investigate using a parser to carve up the list_of_things = [...] statement? Basically, I just need to identify each Thing(...) expression and then count out some number of them. I should be able to do that using re. Or perhaps I should write my own parser using Python string operations as all I need to do is count out some number of Things delimited by "Thing(" at one end and "),\nThing(" at the other (or ")]\n" at the end of the list). Did I just answer my own question? Of course, I need to balance the complexity of any alternative solution against simply executing the statement on the server. -- Jeffrey Barish -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list