As an alternative to mgilson's excellent answer, you could subclass int
into a custom class to achieve this
>>> class V(int):
... def __new__(cls,val,**kwargs):
... return super(V,cls).__new__(cls,max(val,0))
Then use it directly:
>>> A=V(200)
200
>>> B=V(-140)
0
>>> [V(i) for i in [200, -140, 400, -260]]
[200, 0, 400, 0]
>>> A,B,C,D = [V(i) for i in [200, -140, 400, -260]]
The only advantage to do it this way is you can then override __sub__
and __add__
__mul__
appropriately and then you V ints will always greater than 0 even if you have a=V(50)-100
Example:
>>> class V(int):
... def __new__(cls,val,**kwargs):
... return super(V,cls).__new__(cls,max(val,0))
... def __sub__(self,other):
... if int.__sub__(self,other)<0:
... return 0
... else:
... return int.__sub__(self,other)
>>> a=V(50)
>>> b=V(100)
>>> a-b #ordinarily 50-100 would be -50, no?
0
CapWords
is generally reserved for classes in Python - check the Python style guide (PEP-8) for more.A,B,C,D
anyway :^).