indexed property? Can it be done?
Charles Hixson
charleshixsn at earthlink.net
Tue May 8 18:59:23 EDT 2012
On 05/08/2012 01:19 PM, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
> On Mon, 2012-05-07 at 20:15 -0700, Charles Hixson wrote:
>
>> class Node:
>> def __init__(self, nodeId, key, value, downRight, downLeft, parent):
>> dirty = True
>> dlu = utcnow()
>> self.node = [nodeId, downLeft, [key], [value],
>> [downRight], parent, dirty, dlu]
>> Note that node[3] is a list of keys (initially 1) and node[3] is a list
>> of values, etc.
>> What I'd like to do is to be able to address them thusly:
>> k = node.key[2]
>> v = node.value[2]
>> but if there's a way to do this, I haven't been able to figure it out.
>> Any suggestions?
>>
> Do not do this; this is bad code in any language.
>
I'm sorry, but why do you say that? In D or Eiffel it is a standard
approach, with compiler support. I will admit that one shouldn't do it
in C++, or, it appears, in Python. This is far from justifying saying
one should never do it.
--
Charles Hixson
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