D
Daniel Fetchinson
Hi list, I've been following a discussion on a new way of defining
getters and setters on python-dev and just can't understand what the
purpose is. Everybody agreed on the dev list that this is a good idea
so I guess it must be right
The whole thing started with this post of Guido:
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2007-October/075057.html
which then continued into November. Basically, the idea is that using
the new way a setter can be added to property that was read-only
before. But if I have this already,
class C:
@property
def attr( self ): return self._attr
what prevents me using the following for adding a setter for attr:
class C:
def attr( self ): return self._attr
def set_attr( self, value ): self._attr = value
attr = property( attr, set_attr )
In other words all I needed to do is delete @property, write the
setter method and add attr = property( attr, set_attr ). What does the
new way improve on this?
getters and setters on python-dev and just can't understand what the
purpose is. Everybody agreed on the dev list that this is a good idea
so I guess it must be right
The whole thing started with this post of Guido:
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2007-October/075057.html
which then continued into November. Basically, the idea is that using
the new way a setter can be added to property that was read-only
before. But if I have this already,
class C:
@property
def attr( self ): return self._attr
what prevents me using the following for adding a setter for attr:
class C:
def attr( self ): return self._attr
def set_attr( self, value ): self._attr = value
attr = property( attr, set_attr )
In other words all I needed to do is delete @property, write the
setter method and add attr = property( attr, set_attr ). What does the
new way improve on this?