Symbols as parameters?

Dave Angel davea at ieee.org
Thu Jan 21 11:01:18 EST 2010


Martin Drautzburg wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> When passing parameters to a function, you sometimes need a paramter
> which can only assume certain values, e.g.
>
>         def move (direction):
>                 ...
> If direction can only be "up", "down", "left" or "right", you can solve
> this by passing strings, but this is not quite to the point:
>
>         - you could pass invalid strings easily
>         - you need to quote thigs, which is a nuisance
>         - the parameter IS REALLY NOT A STRING, but a direction
>
> Alternatively you could export such symbols, so when you "import *" you
> have them available in the caller's namespace. But that forces you
> to "import *" which pollutes your namespace.
>
> What I am really looking for is a way
>
>         - to be able to call move(up)
>         - having the "up" symbol only in the context of the function call
>
> So it should look something like this
>
> ... magic, magic ...
> move(up)
> ... unmagic, unmagic ...
> print up
>
> This should complain that "up" is not defined during the "print" call,
> but not when move() is called. And of course there should be as little
> magic as possible.
>
> Any way to achieve this?
>
>
>   
My favorite answer provided by others was adding the attributes to the 
function right after the function definition, then using
      move(move.up)

But another approach is to define the function as:

def move(up=False, down=False, right=False, left=False):
    if up:
          ...
   if down:
           ....

and call it as:

move(up=True)

DaveA




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