jorma kala wrote:
Hi,
I'm using apply to pass keyword arguments as a dictionary to a funcion
at runtime (which keyword arguments to pass is only known at runtime)
apply is very handy for this, because it takes a dictionary of keyword
arguments directly
def f1(a=None,b=None,c=None):
pass
Many thanks!!
On Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 4:21 PM, Gary Herron wrote:
> jorma kala wrote:
>
>>
>> Hi,
>> I'm using apply to pass keyword arguments as a dictionary to a funcion at
>> runtime (which keyword arguments to pass is only known at runtime)
>> apply is very handy for this, because it takes
jorma kala wrote:
Hi,
I'm using apply to pass keyword arguments as a dictionary to a
funcion at runtime (which keyword arguments to pass is only known at
runtime)
apply is very handy for this, because it takes a dictionary of keyword
arguments directly
def f1(a=None,b=None,c=None):
pas
Hi,
I'm using apply to pass keyword arguments as a dictionary to a funcion at
runtime (which keyword arguments to pass is only known at runtime)
apply is very handy for this, because it takes a dictionary of keyword
arguments directly
def f1(a=None,b=None,c=None):
pass
kw={'a':1}
apply(f1,