affectation in if statement
Bruno Desthuilliers
bruno.42.desthuilliers at websiteburo.invalid
Tue Mar 16 06:53:22 EDT 2010
samb a écrit :
> Hi,
>
> I've found a work around, inspired from Rob Williscroft :
>
> class ReMatch(object):
> """
> Object to be called :
> 1st time : do a regexp.match and return the answer (args:
> regexp, line)
> 2nd time : return the previous result (args: prev)
> """
> def __call__(self, regexp='', line='', prev=False):
> if prev:
> return self.prev_match
> self.prev_match = re.match(regexp, line)
> return self.prev_match
>
> re_match = ReMatch()
>
> if re_match(r'define\s+(\S+)\s*{$', line):
> m = re_match(prev=True)
> # do some logic with m
> elif re_match(r'include\s+(\S+)$', line):
> m = re_match(prev=True)
> # do some logic with m
> else
> # do some logic
>
> Hope this is efficient ... I guess yes.
A direct attribute access is cheaper than a method call, and makes for a
simpler API too:
class ReMatch(object):
match = None
def __call__(self, regexp, source):
self.match = re.match(regexp, source)
return self.match
re_match = ReMatch()
if re_match(r'define\s+(\S+)\s*{$', line):
m = re_match.match
# do some logic with m
elif re_match(r'include\s+(\S+)$', line):
m = re_match.match
# do some logic with m
My 2 cents...
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