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Here's the code: http://paste.pocoo.org/show/238093/

My main questions right now are:

  1. Is Line 37 mainly the gist of this program? And does it simply calculate this once and then print the result? Ex: self.start + key*self.step with start=1, key=4, step=2 [prints 9]

  2. where does the variable 'value' actually come into play here? Line 39.

  3. Not worried about the "Exceptions" part of the program. I pretty much understand what it's doing.

  4. Lastly, and you really don't have to answer this one as it's probably better as another question "down the road" but I really do not see how __getitem__, __setitem__...etc...you still have to write in your own code to "make it do stuff". :) I'm just not getting what's so "special" about these special methods.

1 Answer 1

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  1. Yes, more or less.
  2. This is the exception. If someone assigns a value to a particular index, the sequence remembers that and will return that value instead of calculating it. Note that the code here does not actually use this function.
  3. Random comment instead: the last 3 lines of the getitem function could be much more concisely implemented as return self.changed.get(key, self.start + key*self.step) -- dict.get lets you provide a default to return if a key is missing.
  4. They're "special" only in that they let you override what happens when someone does yourthing[foo] or yourthing[foo] = bar. You see the first going on here; the second is what happens if someone does s[5] = 100 -- the 100 ends up as the value of a __setitem__ call.
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  • Excellent comments/replies! I couldn't asked for anything better. I understand more of what is going on now and now I can move on to other topics. Thanks for your help, I really do appreciate it.
    – jimmyc3po
    Jul 15, 2010 at 22:26
  • If it was helpful, toss an upvote his way, and mark the answer as accepted. That's the appropriate way to show your thanks on StackOverflow. (although the comment is probably appreciated too.)
    – Wilduck
    Jul 15, 2010 at 22:36
  • Oh, okay. Thanks for letting me know. "First timer". :)
    – jimmyc3po
    Jul 15, 2010 at 22:39

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