On 11/27/2010 04:51 AM, Nick Coghlan wrote: > x = named_value("FOO", 1) > y = named_value("BAR", "Hello World!") > z = named_value("BAZ", dict(a=1, b=2, c=3)) > > print(x, y, z, sep="\n") > print("\n".join(map(repr, (x, y, z)))) > print("\n".join(map(str, map(type, (x, y, z))))) > > set_named_values(globals(), foo=x._raw(), bar=y._raw(), baz=z._raw()) > print("\n".join(map(repr, (foo, bar, baz)))) > print(type(x) is type(foo), type(y) is type(bar), type(z) is type(baz)) > > ========================================================================== > > # Session output for the last 6 lines >>>> >>> print(x, y, z, sep="\n") > 1 > Hello World! > {'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2} > >>>> >>> print("\n".join(map(repr, (x, y, z)))) > FOO=1 > BAR='Hello World!' > BAZ={'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2} This reminds me of python annotations. Which seem like an already forgotten new feature. Maybe they can help with this? It does associate additional info to names and creates a nice dictionary to reference. >>> def name_values( FOO: 1, BAR: "Hello World!", BAZ: dict(a=1, b=2, c=3) ): ... return FOO, BAR, BAZ ... >>> foo(1,2,3) (1, 2, 3) >>> foo.__annotations__ {'BAR': 'Hello World!', 'FOO': 1, 'BAZ': {'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2}} Cheers, Ron
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