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In Python is it possible to instantiate a class through a dictionary?

shapes = {'1':Square(), '2':Circle(), '3':Triangle()}

x = shapes[raw_input()]

I want to let the user pick from a menu and not code huge if else statements on the input. For example if the user entered 2, x would then be a new instance of Circle. Is this possible?

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When you tried it, what happened? – S.Lott Jul 30 at 18:12
Well I'm doing it with menu's, and just having a generic menu wrapper handle what menu to load up. I'm very new to this :-/ – mandroid Jul 30 at 18:13
Yes, it's possible, and you're doing it right PROVIDED you want to instantiate all the shapes once at the beginning, store the instances in the dict and have one of them assigned to x. If you want to only instantiate the selected class, or you plan on instantiating individual shapes multiple times, use something like Vinay's answer. – Markus Jul 30 at 18:28

2 Answers

vote up 18 vote down check

Almost. What you want is

shapes = {'1':Square, '2':Circle, '3':Triangle} # just the class names in the dict

x = shapes[raw_input()]() # get class from dict, then call it to create a shape instance.
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vote up 2 vote down

I'd recommend a chooser function:

def choose(optiondict, prompt='Choose one:'):
    print prompt
    while 1:
        for key, value in sorted(optiondict.items()):
            print '%s) %s' % (key, value)
        result = raw_input() # maybe with .lower()
        if result in optiondict:
            return optiondict[result]
        print 'Not an option'

result = choose({'1': Square, '2': Circle, '3': Triangle})()
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