[Guido] > Yes, this is a good thing. Easy to do on lists and dicts. Questions: > > - How to spell it? x.freeze()? x.readonly()? See below. > - Should this reversible? Of course. Or x.freeze(solid=1) to default to permanent rigidity, but not require it. > I.e. should there be an x.unfreeze()? That conveniently answers the first question, since x.unreadonly() reads horribly <wink>. > - Should we support something like this for instances too? Sometimes > it might be cool to be able to freeze changing attribute values... "Should be" supported for every mutable object. Next step: as in endless C++ debates, endless Python debates about "representation freeze" vs "logical freeze" ("well, yes, I'm changing this member, but it's just an invisible cache so I *should* be able to tag the object as const anyway ..."; etc etc etc). keep-it-simple-ly y'rs - tim
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