On Tuesday, December 29, 2015 at 7:23:40 PM UTC, Mark Lawrence wrote: > On 29/12/2015 17:27, xeon Mailinglist wrote: > > On Tuesday, December 29, 2015 at 5:15:24 PM UTC, Mark Lawrence wrote: > >> 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 > > > > Here is the full class that I use to store the data. > > > > from dogpile.cache import make_region > > > > > > # my_dictionary = {} > > region = make_region().configure('dogpile.cache.memory') > > # arguments={"cache_dict":my_dictionary}) > > class Cache: > > > > @staticmethod > > 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) > > > > @staticmethod > > 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) > > > > > > @staticmethod > > def get_or_create(key): > > """ > > General purpose method to get data from the cache. If the value > > does not exist, it creates a list > > > > :param: key (string) key of the data to be fetched > > :return value (any type) data to be returned from the cache > > """ > > return region.get_or_create(key, list) > > > > @staticmethod > > def set_job_predictions(rank_list): > > Cache.save("job_predictions", rank_list) > > > > @staticmethod > > def get_job_predictions(): > > return Cache.get("job_predictions") > > > > I get the strong impression that you're reinventing wheels and doing it > so badly that they're triangular. Have you tried pypi > https://pypi.python.org/pypi for proven code that could do the job for you? > > -- > My fellow Pythonistas, ask not what our language can do for you, ask > what you can do for our language. > > Mark Lawrence
@Mark I don't understand your remark. Pypi is a repository. What this has to do with my problem? @Peter I have solve the problem, although it is a little bit unclear to me what is the reason. I start to think that this is a problem related to packages and sub-packages. Eg. method1() is in the mypkg/file1.py, and method2() is in mypkg/scheduler/file2.py. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list