Configuring an object via a dictionary
Loris Bennett
loris.bennett at fu-berlin.de
Fri Mar 15 05:30:03 EDT 2024
Hi,
I am initialising an object via the following:
def __init__(self, config):
self.connection = None
self.source_name = config['source_name']
self.server_host = config['server_host']
self.server_port = config['server_port']
self.user_base = config['user_base']
self.user_identifier = config['user_identifier']
self.group_base = config['group_base']
self.group_identifier = config['group_identifier']
self.owner_base = config['owner_base']
However, some entries in the configuration might be missing. What is
the best way of dealing with this?
I could of course simply test each element of the dictionary before
trying to use. I could also just write
self.config = config
but then addressing the elements will add more clutter to the code.
However, with a view to asking forgiveness rather than
permission, is there some simple way just to assign the dictionary
elements which do in fact exist to self-variables?
Or should I be doing this completely differently?
Cheers,
Loris
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