Rodrick Brown wrote:
I'm having a hard time dealing with the following scenario
My class takes a hash like the following: rdargs = {'env:'prod','feed':'opra','hostname':'host13dkp1','process':'delta','side':'a','zone','ny'} All the keys in this hash can be optional. I'm having a hard time dealing with all 36 possible combinations and I dont want to use a monstorous if not and else or etc... to evaluate all possible combinations before I call my search routine. How do others deal with situations like this? And have it look readable? if someone supplies just a host and side my search can return 400 responses, if they supply all 6 elements it can return just 1-5 matches.

class RD(object):
   def __init__(self,**kwargs):
       self.value = 0
#for field in ('env', 'side', 'zone', 'feed', 'hostname', 'process', 'status'):
           #val = kwargs[field] if kwargs.has_key(field) else False
           #setattr(self, field, val)
       self.env = kwargs.get('env',False)
       self.side = kwargs.get('side',False)
       self.zone = kwargs.get('zone',False)
       self.feed = kwargs.get('feed',False)
       self.hostname = kwargs.get('hostname',False)
       self.process = kwargs.get('process',False)
       self.status = kwargs.get('status',False)

class RD(object):
    def __init__(
        self,
        env=False,
        side=False,
        zone=False,
        feed=False,
        hostname=False,
        process=False,
        status=False
        ):
            self.env = env
            self.side = side
            self.zone = zone
            self.feed = feed
            self.hostname = hostname
            self.process = process
            self.status = status

What does the code look like that actually uses this information?

~Ethan~
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