what it is the best way to accomplish the following, either subclassing tuple or some other trick?
region = ( "buffer", "region" )
region.cmd = ( "kill", "mark" )
You can simply subclass tuple
without modification and it will work. By subclassing a built-in class it gains the ability to have arbitrary properties assigned to it, like normal user-defined classes.
class Region(tuple):
pass
region = Region(( "buffer", "region" ))
region.cmd = ( "kill", "mark" )
class Region(tuple):
def __init__(self, *args):
super(Region, self).__init__(self, *args)
self.cmd = None
region = Region(("buffer", "region"))
region.cmd = ("kill", "mark")
I'm not sure what you're asking.
If you want nested data structure I'd probably use a dictionary instead of a tuple.
region = {
"buffer" : ("kill", "mark"),
"region" : ("kill", "mark")
}
Tuples are non mutable as well I believe.
Use a named tuple: http://docs.python.org/dev/library/collections.html#collections.namedtuple
region
is a tuple, not a list.