Quoting Joe Strout <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Nov 13, 2008, at 10:19 AM, Chris Mellon wrote: > > > Static storage is a way of preserving state. Objects are a way of > > encapsulating state and behavior. Use an object. > > Argh. I've been back in the Python community for about a month, and > I've been continually amazed at how every single "how do I do X" or > "what do you think of this method of doing X" question is answered by > people on high horses claiming "you shouldn't do X". > > I know very well about state and objects. I'll be happy to whip out > my software engineering credentials and measure them against yours if > that's how you like to play. I'm sure your credentials are bigger than mine. But he is right. A lot of languages have ditched the "concept" of a static variable on a method (how do you parse that sentence, btw?) in favour of using encapsulation. Of the top of my head, there is Java, C# and Python, and I think even PHP and Perl. They call them "private variables", including the name-mangled-publicly-accessible-__python's variables. I only know one family of languages that support it: C/C++ (LISP, maybe? I don't remember - my list is very sketchy), but here comes into play the fact that your credentials are bigger. But that may be the reason why you refuse to follow yet another model. Python doesn't have the concept of 'static variables', as in "a variable that remembers its value between function calls". Instance attributes (or class atributes, or metaclass attributes - your choice, depending on the problem) exist for that. So, if you want to simulate your C++ static variables in python, you ha ve a few choices (more than in other languages, btw): * Global variable. Ouch. We really don't want you going there :D * Instance variable. Maybe a __private instance variable, to avoid polluting your descendant's namespaces. * Class/Metaclass variables (if you need them - that's rare). * Closures * Default arguments (too fragile for my taste) * Instance variables _of the function object_. For the last three: (untested code follows) * With closures: === def myfunc(): pseudo_static_list = [] def real_function(args): pseudo_static_list.append(args) print pseudo_static_list return real_function myfunc = myfunc() === [or, until python removes the apply function] === @apply def myfunc(): # same definition as before return real_function === Caveat: you cannot assign, as in python 2.5 at least, to the closure variable - doing so would create a local variable instead. * With default argument: === def myfunc(normal_args, _hidden_arg=[]): _hidden_arg.append(normal_args) print _hidden arg === (You can't shouldn't to _hidden_arg either, and you risk someone invoking the function with that argument) * With function's instance members: === def myfunc(args): myfunc.counter=1 # well, you should use some logic to see if it's not # initialized myfunc.counter+=1 print myfunc.counter === Instance attributes beats them all, though. > I understand very well when data should > be stored as instance data, and when it should be instead tucked away > as static data within a method. OT: Please enlighthen me. I didn't grew with C, and even when I saw C++, instance variables made a lot more sense to me that 'static' variables. > If you don't understand that, or are > happy without having the choice, and have no answer to the question I > was asking, then that's fine. I believe he had an answer... You didn't like it, though. I hope mine was more palatable to you. -- Luis Zarrabeitia Facultad de Matemática y Computación, UH http://profesores.matcom.uh.cu/~kyrie -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list