On Tue, Apr 26, 2016 at 9:32 AM, Steven D'Aprano <st...@pearwood.info> wrote:
> Subclassing immutable built-ins is the most obvious and simple (and > probably > common) way to get an immutable class. Actually immutable, short of doing > wicked things with ctypes. > By wicked things with ctypes, do you mean something like this? By no means do I suggest this actually be used by anybody for any reason. Tested with '2.7.10 (default, Jul 14 2015, 19:46:27) \n[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple LLVM 6.0 (clang-600.0.39)]' import ctypes def changeTuple(tuple, index, newValue): obj = ctypes.cast(id(tuple), ctypes.POINTER(ctypes.c_long)) obj[3+index] = id(newValue) >>> a = ('a','b','c') >>> changeTuple(a, 0, 1) >>> a (1, 'b', 'c') >>> changeTuple(a, 1, 3) >>> a (1, 3, 'c') Chris -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list