18-08-2009 o 22:27:41 Nat Williams <nat.willi...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 2:44 PM, Pavel Panchekha
<pavpanche...@gmail.com>wrote:
I want a dictionary that will transparently "inherit" from a parent
dictionary. So, for example:
"""
a = InheritDict({1: "one", 2: "two", 4: "four"})
b = InheritDict({3: "three", 4: "foobar"}, inherit_from=a)
a[1] # "one"
a[4] # "four"
b[1] # "one"
b[3] # "three"
b[4] # "foobar"
"""
I've written something like this in Python already, but I'm wondering
if something like this already exists, preferably written in C, for
speed.
Why complicate this with a custom object? Just use regular dicts and
make b a copy of a.
a = {1: 'one', 2: 'two', 4: 'four'}
b = dict(a)
b[3] = 'three'
b[4] = 'foobar'
Because, as I understand Pavel's intent, it has to work dynamically
(e.g. changes in 'a' reflect in behaviour of 'b'), and obviously not
only for such trivial examples like above.
*j
--
Jan Kaliszewski (zuo) <z...@chopin.edu.pl>
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