On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 10:47 PM Raymond Hettinger < raymond.hettinger at gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Dec 21, 2017, at 3:21 PM, Gregory P. Smith <greg at krypto.org> wrote: > > > > It seems a suggested use is "from dataclasses import dataclass" > > > > But people are already familiar with "from collections import > namedtuple" which suggests to me that "from collections import dataclass" > would be a more natural sounding API addition. > > This might make sense if it were a single self contained function. But > dataclasses are their own little ecosystem that warrants its own module > namespace: > > >>> import dataclasses > >>> dataclasses.__all__ > ['dataclass', 'field', 'FrozenInstanceError', 'InitVar', 'fields', > 'asdict', 'astuple', 'make_dataclass', 'replace'] > > Also, remember that dataclasses have a dual role as a data holder (which > is collection-like) and as a generator of boilerplate code (which is more > like functools.total_ordering). > > I support Eric's decision to make this a separate module. > sounds good. lets leave it that way. dataclasses it is. if we were further along in figuring out how to remove the distinction between a class and a module as a namespace I'd suggest the module name itself be dataclass with a __call__ method so that the module could be the decorator so we could avoid the antipattern of importing a name from a module into your local namespace. but we're not, so we can't. :) -gps > > > Raymond > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/attachments/20171222/f2aab659/attachment.html>
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