On 7月16日, 下午5时35分, Ben Finney <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > zhw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > Here is a example that I want to complete: > > >>> import sys, new > > >>> context={"name":"david", "sex":"male"} > > Here you have a set of values addressible by name. > > > >>> sys.modules["foo"] = new.module("foo") > > Why do you believe you need to create a module object? > > > >>> import foo > > >>> for attr in context: > > setattr(foo, attr, context[attr]) > > This doesn't appear to get you anything that isn't already available > with the 'context' mapping. > > > >>> def bar(): > > # here is a error > > # import * only allowed at module level > > from foo import * > > print name, sex > > You can simply do: > > >>> context = {'name': "david", 'sex': "male"} > >>> def bar(): > ... print context['name'], context['sex'] > ... > >>> bar() > david male > > Or, more flexible and more explicit: > > >>> foo = {'name': "david", 'sex': "male"} > >>> def bar(context): > ... print context['name'], context['sex'] > ... > >>> bar(foo) > david male > > What problem are you trying to solve?
I an sorry, I can't tell you. If you can't give a solution, just ignore it! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list