Re: Accessing a method from within its own code

2009-11-02 Thread Dave Angel
Paddy O'Loughlin wrote: I suspect that the "inspection" module has your answer, but that it'll be bulkier, and much slower than just doing what you're doing already. Hmm. Yeah, it does appear to be bulky. I don't think it's really any more use than what I'm doing already. Why not use the

Re: Accessing a method from within its own code

2009-11-02 Thread Paddy O'Loughlin
> > I suspect that the "inspection" module has your answer, but that it'll be > bulkier, and much slower than just doing what you're doing already. > Hmm. Yeah, it does appear to be bulky. I don't think it's really any more use than what I'm doing already. Why not use the default arguments gimmic

Re: Accessing a method from within its own code

2009-11-02 Thread Gerard Flanagan
Paddy O'Loughlin wrote: Hi, I was wondering if there was a shorthand way to get a reference to a method object from within that method's code. Take this code snippet as an example: import re class MyClass(object): def find_line(self, lines): if not hasattr(MyClass.do_work, "matche

Re: Accessing a method from within its own code

2009-11-02 Thread Dave Angel
Paddy O'Loughlin wrote: Hi, I was wondering if there was a shorthand way to get a reference to a method object from within that method's code. Take this code snippet as an example: import re class MyClass(object): def find_line(self, lines): if not hasattr(MyClass.do_work, "matcher"