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I am using easyzone and dnspython to extract DNS records from a zone file. When extracting A records I am given back a string and an object in a tuple. I am new to Python coming from PHP and am not quite sure how to get at this object to get the value of it? I had no problems getting the string value in the tuple.

In this code snippet I iterate through the A records and write the values into a CSV:

    # Write all A records
    for a in z.names.items():
        c.writerow([domain, 'A', a.__getitem__(0), a])

a contains the following:

('www.121dentalcare.com.', <easyzone.easyzone.Name object at 0x1012dd190>)

How would I access this object within a which is in the 2nd half of this tuple??

1 Answer 1

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You can use indices to get items from a tuple:

sometuple[1]

just as you can do with lists and strings (see sequence types).

The documentation of easyzone is a little on the thin side, but from looking at the source code it appears the easyzone.easyzone.Name objects have .name, .soa and .ttl attributes:

print sometuple[1].name

The .soa attribute is another custom class, with .mname, .rname, .serial, .refresh, .retry, .expire and .minttl properties.

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  • It might be worth mentioning that tuple indices (indeed all indices in python) start at 0 Nov 1, 2012 at 14:19
  • Excellent, now I can isolate that object with a[1] and it returns <easyzone.easyzone.Name object at 0x1012dd2d0> when entered in the CSV. Is there anything like var_dump in PHP for Python, there is an IP inside this object but I am unsure on how to get at the contents of the object or discover its structure? Nov 1, 2012 at 14:25
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    @xXPhenom22Xx You can inspect objects with dir (gets attributes) and a few other (more specialized) functions. Alternatively ask the documentation. The latter is generally better, because it tells if what's the intended way, can mention caveats/deprecations/alternatives/etc. and doesn't leave you relying on implementation details which change with the next minor release...
    – user395760
    Nov 1, 2012 at 14:36
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    @delnan: documentation, in this case, is close to non-existent, from what I can make out.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Nov 1, 2012 at 14:38
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    @xXPhenom22Xx: The z.root object in the examples given is a Name object, so the .records() call examples shown there apply.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Nov 1, 2012 at 14:47

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