On 10 September 2013 18:06, Antoine Pitrou <solipsis at pitrou.net> wrote: > On Tue, 10 Sep 2013 17:38:26 -0300 > "Joao S. O. Bueno" <jsbueno at python.org.br> wrote: >> On 10 September 2013 16:08, Paul Moore <p.f.moore at gmail.com> wrote: >> > If you provide "retain the last", I can't see any obvious way of >> > implementing "retain the first" in application code without in effect >> > reimplementing the class. >> >> Which reminds one - this class should obviously have a method for >> retrivieng the original key value, given a matching key - >> >> d.canonical('foo') -> 'Foo' > > I don't know. Is there any use case? > (sure, it is trivially implemented) Well, I'd expect it to simply be there. I had not thought of other usecases for the transformdict itself - but if I would use it and would need the original key without such a method it would not be trivial to get it. For example, in latim languages it is common to want accented letters to match their unaccented counterparts - pick my own first name "João" - if I'd use a transform to strip the diactriticals, and have an user input "joao" - it would match, as intended - but I would not be able to retrieve the accented version without re-implementing the class behavior. js -><- > > Regards > > Antoine. > _______________________________________________ > Python-Dev mailing list > Python-Dev at python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev > Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/jsbueno%40python.org.br
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