I've started to use constructs like these:

    class DictObj(object):
        def __init__(self):
            self.d = {}
        def __getattr__(self, m):
            return self.d.get(m, None)
        def __setattr__(self, m, v):
            super.__setattr__(self, m, v)

Update: based on this thread, I've revised the DictObj implementation to:

    class dotdict(dict):
        def __getattr__(self, attr):
            return self.get(attr, None)
        __setattr__= dict.__setitem__
        __delattr__= dict.__delitem__

    class AutoEnum(object):
        def __init__(self):
            self.counter = 0
            self.d = {}
        def __getattr__(self, c):
            if c not in self.d:
                self.d[c] = self.counter
                self.counter += 1        
            return self.d[c]

where DictObj is a dictionary that can be accessed via dot notation:

    d = DictObj()
    d.something = 'one'

I find it more aesthetically pleasing than <code>d['something']</code>. Note that accessing an undefined key returns None instead of raising an exception, which is also nice.

Update: Smashery makes a good point, which mhawke expands on for an easier solution. I'm wondering if there are any undesirable side effects of using __dict__ instead of defining a new dictionary; if not, I like mhawke's solution a lot.


AutoEnum is an auto-incrementing Enum, used like this:

    CMD = AutoEnum()
    
    cmds = {
        "peek":  CMD.PEEK,
        "look":  CMD.PEEK,
        "help":  CMD.HELP,
        "poke":  CMD.POKE,
        "modify": CMD.POKE,
    }

Both are working well for me, but I'm feeling unpythonic about them. 

Are these in fact bad constructs?