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Read up on the with statement. You're describing its use case.

You'll need to wrap your connection in a "Context Manager" class that handles the __enter__ and __exit__ methods used by the with statement.

See PEP 343 for more information.


Edit

"my object isn't used as simply as open-play-close, but is kept as a member of another, larger object"

class AnObjectWhichMustBeClosed( object ):
    def __enter__( self ):
        # acquire
    def __exit__( self, type, value, traceback ):
        # release
    def open( self, dbConnectionInfo ):
        # open the connection, updating the state for __exit__ to handle.

class ALargerObject( object ):
    def __init__( self ):
        pass
    def injectTheObjectThatMustBeClosed( self, anObject ):
        self.useThis = anObject

class MyGuiApp( self ):
    def run( self ):
        # build GUI objects
        large = ALargeObject()
        with AnObjectWhichMustBeClosed() as x:
            large.injectTheObjectThatMustBeClosed( x )
            mainLoop()

Some folks call this "Dependency Injection" and "Inversion of Control". Other folks call this the Strategy pattern. The "ObjectThatMustBeClosed" is a strategy, plugged into some larger object. The assembly is created at a top-level of the GUI app, since that's usually where resources like databases are acquired.

show/hide this revision's text 2 deleted 1 characters in body

Read up on the with statement. You're describing it's its use case.

You'll need to wrap your connection in a "Context Manager" class that handles the __enter__ and __exit__ methods used by the with statement.

See PEP 343 for more information.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Read up on the with statement. You're describing it's use case.

You'll need to wrap your connection in a "Context Manager" class that handles the __enter__ and __exit__ methods used by the with statement.

See PEP 343 for more information.