Mike Meyer wrote: > The thing is, the need for an extra attribute doesn't come from your > class, it comes from the client of your class. You can't know if the > client code will need that facility or not, so the only choice you > know won't be wrong sometime is to always add the mixin. In which > case, you should follow the Python "the less boilerplate, the better" > practice, and leave it off. Which is what we have. > > Letting the class author declare whether or not the client can add > attributes is wrong for the same reasons - and in the same places - > that letting the class author declare that the client shouldn't be > allowed to access specific attributes, and so on, is wrong. Of > course, it's also *right* for the same reasons and in the same places > as those things. I just don't think those places happen in Python > programs. > I am puzzled, and could have read what you want wrong. Are you saying you want something like this :
a={} a.something = "I want to hang my stuff here, outside the intended use of dict" -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list