Function argument conformity check
Cédric Lucantis
omer at no-log.org
Wed Jun 18 15:13:15 EDT 2008
Hi,
Le Wednesday 18 June 2008 20:19:12 dlists.cad at gmail.com, vous avez écrit :
> Hi. I am looking for a way to check if some given set of (*args,
> **kwds) conforms to the argument specification of a given function,
> without calling that function.
>
> For example, given the function foo:
> def foo(a, b, c): pass
>
> and some tuple args and some dict kwds, is there a way to tell if i
> _could_ call foo(*args, **kwds) without getting an exception for those
> arguments? I am hoping there is a way to do this without actually
> writing out the argument logic python uses.
>
Each function object is associated to a code object which you can get with
foo.func_code. Two of this object's attributes will help you: co_argcount and
co_varnames. The first is the number of arguments of the function, and the
second a list of all the local variables names, including the arguments
(which are always the first items of the list). When some arguments have
default values, they are stored in foo.func_defaults (and these arguments are
always after non-default args in the co_argnames list).
Finally, it seems that some flags are set in code.co_flags if the function
accepts varargs like *args, **kwargs, but I don't know where these are
defined.
Note that I never found any doc about that and merely guessed it by playing
with func objects, so consider all this possibly wrong or subject to change.
--
Cédric Lucantis
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