After some additional research, it looks like I may have even more options to consider including using a UserDict mixin.
I think I've identified another magic method to subclass ... __missing__. ----- Original message ----- From: [1]pyt...@bdurham.com To: [2]python-list@python.org Subject: Creating a dict-like class that counts successful and failed key matches Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2014 09:43:49 -0400 As a diagnostic tool, I would like to create a dict-like class that counts successful and failed key matches by key. By failed I mean in the sense that a default value was returned vs. an exception raised. By count, I mean by tracking counts for individual keys vs. just total success/failure counts. The class needs to support setting values, retrieving values, and retrieving keys, items, and key/item pairs. Basically anything that a regular dict, I'd like my modified class to do as well. Use case: I'm curious to see what key's we're missing that our code is using default to provide and I'm also interested in looking at our high frequency keys as a way to double check our processes. Is this a common pattern covered by the standard lib (I don't see anything in collections)? I'm looking for ideas on how to implement ... as a subclass of Dict, as a duck-like class offering Dict like methods, other? I'm also looking for some hints on what magic methods I should override to accomplish my goal, eg. beyond __getitem__. Thank you, Malcolm -- [3]https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list References 1. mailto:pyt...@bdurham.com 2. mailto:python-list@python.org 3. https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
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