How to use imported function to get current globals
1989lzhh
1989lzhh at gmail.com
Sun Jun 8 01:51:53 EDT 2014
thanks all you guys. I have find the solution which is quite simple by using sys._frame(1).f_locals in function to get the caller's scope
The following is my user case:
I am writing a tool to translate python code to cython code then compiled using decorate.
jit, build=make("mymodule")
#jit function collect python code and signature then translate to cython code
@jit('int(int)',
locals='''
int b;
''')
def f(a):
b=1
return a+1
build()# compile cython code and load compiled module then expose compiled function to current namespace. So this is my purpose to get caller's scope
f()# now f is a compiled function
发自我的 iPhone
> 在 Jun 8, 2014,10:24,Dave Angel <davea at davea.name> 写道:
>
> 1989lzhh <1989lzhh at gmail.com> Wrote in message:
>> Here is the code
>> m1.py
>> def f():
>> print globals()
>>
>> m2.py
>> from m1 import f
>> f()# how to get current module's globals?
>
> As others have said, it's probably a bad idea. I can think of 3
> reasons to try: teacher said so, writing a debugger,
> transliterating code from a crude language into python.
>
> Could you elaborate on what you really want? Which of those two
> modules is your main script? Which code in which module is trying
> to get which module's globals? And is the connection static or
> dynamic? And do you want a snapshot of them, or to be able to
> modify and track changes?
>
>
>
>
> --
> DaveA
>
> --
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