[ python-Bugs-925537 ] dir(mod) OK or use vars(mod).keys()?
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Mon Mar 29 14:58:17 EST 2004
Bugs item #925537, was opened at 2004-03-29 14:28
Message generated for change (Comment added) made by jimjjewett
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Category: Python Library
Group: Python 2.4
Status: Open
Resolution: None
Priority: 5
Submitted By: Jim Jewett (jimjjewett)
Assigned to: Nobody/Anonymous (nobody)
Summary: dir(mod) OK or use vars(mod).keys()?
Initial Comment:
The documentation on dir() notes that its behavior may
change across releases.
Several library modules use dir(x) in ways that might
break if it changed too much.
Should these be changed to use vars(obj).keys() (and
possibly sort()), or should the note on dir() be removed?
My own preference would just be to provide some
guidance, such as "The output of dir() will always include
all public variables which do not have a magic meaning."
I realize that the standard library itself could be updated
if dir() changes in an uncomfortable way. My real
concern is which spelling to use in my own code. The
library examples suggest a simpler (and clearer) dir(), but
the documentation still says otherwise.
A quick search for modules using dir() showed possible
trouble in at least cgitb, cmd, FCNTL, inspect, optparse,
os, pickle, rlcompleter, SimpleXMLRPCServer, TERMIOS,
tokenize, unittest, and urllib2.
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>Comment By: Jim Jewett (jimjjewett)
Date: 2004-03-29 14:58
Message:
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user_id=764593
Correction: "The output of dir (module) will always include ..."
The most common use is figuring out what to do with (import
from) a module.
Symmetry suggests the same for a no-argument call or a class
or type object, but object instances do not use their __dict__
for their attributes; the results are already different there.
-jJ
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment By: Jim Jewett (jimjjewett)
Date: 2004-03-29 14:39
Message:
Logged In: YES
user_id=764593
If there concern is over attributes that are "public" but don't
exist until called, then most uses of dir and vars are already
broken. An alternative reasonable promise would be
The output of dir(obj) will always include all (public?,
non-magical?) names in vars(obj).keys().
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