Skip to main content

Powerful dict subclass(es) with aliasing & attribute access

Project description

## WHAT

Lexicon is a simple Python 2.6+ and 3.3+ compatible collection of `dict`
subclasses providing extra power:

* `AliasDict`, a dictionary supporting both simple and complex key aliasing:
* Alias a single key to another key, so that e.g. `mydict['bar']` points to
`mydict['foo']`, for both reads and writes.
* Alias a single key to a list of other keys, for writing only, e.g. with
`active_groups = AliasDict({'ops': True, 'biz': True, 'dev': True,
'product': True})` one can make an alias `'tech'` mapping to `('ops',
'dev')` and then e.g. `active_groups['tech'] = False`.
* Aliasing is recursive: an alias pointing to another alias will behave as
if it points to the other alias' target.
* `AttributeDict`, supporting attribute read & write access, e.g.
`mydict = AttributeDict({'foo': 'bar'})` exhibits `mydict.foo` and
`mydict.foo = 'new value'`.
* `Lexicon`, a subclass of both of the above which exhibits both sets of
behavior.

## HOW

* `pip install lexicon`
* `from lexicon import Lexicon` (or one of the superclasses)
* Use as needed.

You can install the [development
version](https://github.com/bitprophet/lexicon/tarball/master#egg=lexicon-dev)
via `pip install lexicon==dev`.

If you have a clone of the source repository, you can run the tests like so:

* `pip install -r dev-requirements.txt`
* `spec`

## API

### `AliasDict`

In all examples, `'myalias'` is the alias and `'realkey'` is the "real",
unaliased key.

* `alias(from_'myalias', to='realkey')`: Alias `myalias` to `realkey` so
`d['myalias']` behaves exactly like `d['realkey']` for both reads and writes.
* `from_` is the first keyword argument, but typically it can be omitted
and still reads fine. See below examples for this usage.
See below for details on how an alias affects other dict operations.
* `alias('myalias', to=('realkey', 'otherrealkey'))`: Alias `myalias` to
both `realkey` and `otherrealkey`. As you might expect, this only works well
for writes, as there is never any guarantee that all targets of the alias
will contain the same value.
* `unalias('myalias')`: Removes the `myalias` alias; any subsequent
reads/writes to `myalias` will behave as normal for a regular `dict`.
* `'myalias' in d` (aka `__contains__`): Returns True when given an alias, so
if `myalias` is an alias to some other key, dictionary membership tests will
behave as if `myalias` is set.
* `del d['myalias']` (aka `__delitem__`): This effectively becomes `del
d['realkey']` -- to remove the alias itself, use `unalias()`.
* `del d['realkey']`: Deletes the real key/value pair (i.e. it calls
`dict.__del__`) but doesn't touch any aliases pointing to `realkey`.
* As a result, "dangling" aliases pointing to nonexistent keys will raise
`KeyError` on access, but will continue working if the target key is
repopulated later.

Caveats:

* Because of the single-key/multi-key duality, `AliasDict` is incapable of
honoring non-string-type keys when aliasing (it must test `isinstance(key,
basestring)` to tell strings apart from non-string iterables).
* `AliasDict` instances may still *use* non-string keys, of course -- it
just can't use them as alias targets.

### `AttributeDict`

* `d.key = 'value'` (aka `__setattr__`): Maps directly to `d['key'] = 'value'`.
* `d.key` (aka `__getattr__`): Maps directly to `d['key']`.
* `del d.key` (aka `__delattr__`): Maps directly to `del d['key']`.
* Collisions between "real" or pre-existing attributes, and
attributes-as-dict-keys, always results in the real attribute winning. Thus
it isn't possible to use attribute access to access e.g. `d['get']`.

### `Lexicon`

Lexicon subclasses from `AttributeDict` first, then `AliasDict`, with the end
result that attribute access will honor aliases. E.g.:

d = Lexicon()
d.alias('myalias', to='realkey')
d.myalias = 'foo'
print d.realkey # prints 'foo'

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

lexicon-1.0.0.tar.gz (7.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

lexicon-1.0.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl (7.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

File details

Details for the file lexicon-1.0.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: lexicon-1.0.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 7.5 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for lexicon-1.0.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1a2ed9d86142e2d2dfdb431ed434b2c8ae19a2ed6ca2cea07c75d123353dca3e
MD5 3458e3a6fa04cb53f860a835b295f7a0
BLAKE2b-256 050070adc50cf69312cdd7dbff010062e6587b7951dd0dcd5c535b34e36c2d24

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file lexicon-1.0.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for lexicon-1.0.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a0c74b52ebd53a6bdf34185b36ebfee46423d1138ef4a80ef406649a565938e6
MD5 06b2c0be9e62b2dd45713e2a1580101d
BLAKE2b-256 90bca82e3fa550aacb472b64bc75e1473b57371ab5590342ee86646c82d7bed9

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page