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I am working on a graph library in Python and I am defining my vetex this way:

class Vertex:
def __init__(self,key,value):
    self._key = key
    self._value = value

@property
def key(self):
    return self._key

@key.setter
def key(self,newKey):
    self._key = newKey

@property
def value(self):
    return self._value

@value.setter
def value(self,newValue):
    self.value = newValue

def _testConsistency(self,other):
    if type(self) != type(other):
        raise Exception("Need two vertexes here!")

def __lt__(self,other):
    _testConsistency(other)
    if self.index <= other.index:
        return True
    return False
......

Do I really have to define __lt__,__eq__,__ne__....all by my self? It is so verbose. Is there simpler way I can get around this? Cheers. Please dont use __cmp__ since it will be away in python 3.

8
  • 5
    Why the properties? Why not just use regular attributes?
    – user395760
    Jan 10, 2013 at 19:21
  • Umm @delnan stackoverflow.com/questions/6618002/… this thread may help you
    – Bob Fang
    Jan 10, 2013 at 19:23
  • 1
    I know perfectly well how property works and why it's good. But it's still at least six lines more than just using an attribute (self.key = ... in __init__).
    – user395760
    Jan 10, 2013 at 19:25
  • 3
    I think that delnan's point is that you can define key and value as regular attributes (no need for the _) and then you don't need the properties. If you ever decide you need a property, then you can adjust the code and it will still be backward compatable.
    – mgilson
    Jan 10, 2013 at 19:26
  • +1 to delnan and mgilson's points, it's very bad form to define getters and setters, even with the property decorator, until you actually need them. Jan 10, 2013 at 19:32

2 Answers 2

5

functools.total_ordering can help you out here. It's meant to be a class decorator. You define one of __lt__(), __le__(), __gt__(), or __ge__() AND __eq__ and it fills in the rest.

As a side note:

Instead of writing this

if self.index <= other.index:
    return True
return False

write this:

return self.index <= other.index

It's cleaner that way. :-)

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  • Do I have to import anything to use this? I got error using @total_ordering. Thanks for your answer.
    – Bob Fang
    Jan 10, 2013 at 19:40
2

Using functools.total_ordering, you only need to define one of the equality operators and one of the ordering operators. In Python < 3.2, you're out of luck, something has to define these operators as individual methods. Though you may be able to save some code by writing a simpler version of total_ordering yourself, if you need it in several places.

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