For a collection to be aware of mutation of its elements, there must be some connection between the elements and that collection which can communicate when changes happen. For this reason, we either must bind an instance to a collection or proxy the elements of the collection so that change-communication doesn't leak into the element's code.
A note about the implementation I'm going to present, the proxying method only works if the attributes are changed by direct setting, not inside of a method. A more complex book-keeping system would be necessary then.
Additionally, it assumes that exact duplicates of all attributes won't exist, given that you require the indices be built out of set
objects instead of list
from collections import defaultdict
class Proxy(object):
def __init__(self, proxy, collection):
self._proxy = proxy
self._collection = collection
def __getattribute__(self, name):
if name in ("_proxy", "_collection"):
return object.__getattribute__(self, name)
else:
proxy = self._proxy
return getattr(proxy, name)
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
if name in ("_proxy", "collection"):
object.__setattr__(self, name, value)
else:
proxied = self._proxy
collection = self._collection
old = getattr(proxied, name)
setattr(proxy, name, value)
collection.signal_change(proxied, name, old, value)
class IndexedCollection(object):
def __init__(self, items, index_names):
self.items = list(items)
self.index_names = set(index_names)
self.indices = defaultdict(lambda: defaultdict(set))
def __len__(self):
return len(self.items)
def __iter__(self):
for i in range(len(self)):
yield self[i]
def remove(self, obj):
self.items.remove(obj)
self._remove_from_indices(obj)
def __getitem__(self, i):
# Ensure consumers get a proxy, not a raw object
return Proxy(self.items[i], self)
def append(self, obj):
self.items.append(obj)
self._add_to_indices(obj)
def _add_to_indices(self, obj):
for indx in self.index_names:
key = getattr(obj, indx)
self.indices[indx][key].add(obj)
def _remove_from_indices(self, obj):
for indx in self.index_names:
key = getattr(obj, indx)
self.indices[indx][key].remove(obj)
def signal_change(self, obj, indx, old, new):
if indx not in self.index_names:
return
# Tell the container to update its indices for a
# particular attribute and object
self.indices[indx][old].remove(obj)
self.indices[indx][new].add(obj)
<status, object>
and<timestamp, object>
when the object already has both the attributes?