On 29/12/2015 15:20, xeon Mailinglist wrote:
On Tuesday, December 29, 2015 at 11:16:10 AM UTC, xeon Mailinglist wrote:
1. How do I create a global variable that can be accessed by all classes?

2. I am using `dogpile.cache` to store data in the cache [1], but if I set and 
get the same key from different modules, I don't get the value. Here is an 
example in [2]. The value than I get is `NO_VALUE.NO_VALUE`. Why this happens?

setter is the setter.py
getter is the getter.py
Memoize is the file in [1].


[1] my dogpile class `Memoize.py`

     from dogpile.cache import make_region

     region = make_region().configure('dogpile.cache.memory')

     def save(key, value):
       """
       general purpose method to save data (value) in the cache

       :param key (string) key of the value to be saved in cache
       :param value (any type) the value to be saved
       """
       region.set(key, value)


     def get(key):
       """
       general purpose method to get data from the cache

       :param key (string) key of the data to be fetched
       :return value (any type) data to be returned from the cache
       """
       return region.get(key)


[2] My python example

`setter.py`

     def myset(value):
       Memoize.save("myvalue", value)

`getter.py`

    def myget():
       return Memoize.get("myvalue") <- this value is NO_VALUE. NO_VALUE

My class:

     setter.myset(123)
     getter.myget()

The idea that I get from dogpile, is that in each module (getter.py, or 
setter.py) there is a dictionary where the values are stored in the backend. 
Hence, getter.py has its dictionary and setter.py has its dictionary also. In 
the end, there is not a single dictionary where all the values should be put. 
And I want a single dictionary.


Then put everything in one file. Three files for the amount of code you show above is nonsensical. You might like to read http://dirtsimple.org/2004/12/python-is-not-java.html and in response to that http://dirtsimple.org/2004/12/java-is-not-python-either.html

--
My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you, ask
what you can do for our language.

Mark Lawrence

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