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Hello,

I need to generate code for a method at runtime. It's important to be able to run arbitrary code and have a docstring.

I came up with a solution combining exec and setattr, here's a dummy example:

class Viking(object):
    def __init__(self):
        code = '''
            def dynamo(self, arg):
                """ dynamo's a dynamic method!
                """
                self.weight += 1
                return arg * self.weight
            '''
        self.weight = 50

        d = {}
        exec code.strip() in d
        setattr(self.__class__, 'dynamo', d['dynamo'])


if __name__ == "__main__":
    v = Viking()
    print v.dynamo(10)
    print v.dynamo(10)
    print v.dynamo.__doc__

Is there a better / safer / more idiomatic way of achieving the same result?

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71% accept rate
Why do you need that, did you consider the other metaprogramming facilities in Python? – Torsten Marek Feb 10 at 17:44
I'm open to suggestions :-) I need this to generate rules for PLY, which needs them as methods with docstrings. To automate some boilerplate code, I can generate some rules in a loop at runtime – eliben Feb 10 at 18:00
Can you give a better example, or explain more? The example you give isn't very dynamic since its a hard coded string, I'm having trouble understanding why you can't use dispatchers, polymorphism, metaclasses, etc – Richard Levasseur Feb 10 at 18:17
I'll want to generate several such methods, varying in their names and docstrings in some "loopy" way, i.e. 10 methods named dynamo1..10 with the docstring also having dynamo1..10 in it" – eliben Feb 10 at 18:23

3 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

Based on Theran's code, but extending it to methods on classes:



class Dynamo(object):
    pass

def add_dynamo(cls,i):
    def innerdynamo(self):
        print "in dynamo %d" % i
    innerdynamo.__doc__ = "docstring for dynamo%d" % i
    innerdynamo.__name__ = "dynamo%d" % i
    setattr(cls,innerdynamo.__name__,innerdynamo)

for i in range(2):
    add_dynamo(Dynamo, i)

d=Dynamo()
d.dynamo0()
d.dynamo1()


Which should print:


in dynamo 0
in dynamo 1

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Thanks, this works nicely. Indeed, in this case the 'exec' can be spared - but only because the code of the method is relatively constant and doesn't really (printed strings don't count) depend on the method itself – eliben Feb 11 at 15:45
vote up 4 vote down

Function docstrings and names are mutable properties. You can do anything you want in the inner function, or even have multiple versions of the inner function that makedynamo() chooses between. No need to build any code out of strings.

Here's a snippet out of the interpreter:

>>> def makedynamo(i):
...     def innerdynamo():
...         print "in dynamo %d" % i
...     innerdynamo.__doc__ = "docstring for dynamo%d" % i
...     innerdynamo.__name__ = "dynamo%d" % i
...     return innerdynamo

>>> dynamo10 = makedynamo(10)
>>> help(dynamo10)
Help on function dynamo10 in module __main__:

dynamo10()
    docstring for dynamo10
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how is this done for methods? – eliben Feb 10 at 19:26
vote up 3 vote down

Python will let you declare a function in a function, so you don't have to do the exec trickery.

def __init__(self):

    def dynamo(self, arg):
        """ dynamo's a dynamic method!
        """
        self.weight += 1
        return arg * self.weight
    self.weight = 50

    setattr(self.__class__, 'dynamo', dynamo)

If you want to have several versions of the function, you can put all of this in a loop and vary what you name them in the setattr function:

def __init__(self):

    for i in range(0,10):

        def dynamo(self, arg, i=i):
            """ dynamo's a dynamic method!
            """
            self.weight += i
            return arg * self.weight

        setattr(self.__class__, 'dynamo_'+i, dynamo)
        self.weight = 50

(I know this isn't great code, but it gets the point across). As far as setting the docstring, I know that's possible but I'd have to look it up in the documentation.

Edit: You can set the docstring via dynamo.__doc__, so you could do something like this in your loop body:

dynamo.__doc__ = "Adds %s to the weight" % i

Another Edit: With help from @eliben and @bobince, the closure problem should be solved.

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ā€˜i’ will be 10 in each instance of dynamo once the loop has finished. The variable is not rebound each time around the loop. This is one of the big gotchas about using closures in Python (and other similar languages). – bobince Feb 10 at 18:41
Ah, drat. Thanks for the clarification. Is there a technique that will work? – Justin Voss Feb 10 at 23:55
Justin, for the solution of this gotcha see: stackoverflow.com/questions/233673/… – eliben Feb 11 at 15:47

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