I have a class with a few methods, some of which are only valid when the object is in a particular state. I would like to have the methods simply not be bound to the objects when they're not in a suitable state, so that I get something like:
>>> wiz=Wizard()
>>> dir(wiz)
['__doc__', '__module__', 'addmana']
>>> wiz.addmana()
>>> dir(wiz)
['__doc__', '__module__', 'addmana', 'domagic']
>>> wiz.domagic()
>>> dir(wiz)
['__doc__', '__module__', 'addmana']
>>> wiz.domagic()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: Wizard instance has no attribute 'domagic'
I can see how to add methods (types.MethodType(method, object)), but I can't see any way to delete a method for just a single object:
>>> wiz.domagic
<bound method Wizard.domagic of <__main__.Wizard instance at 0x7f0390d06950>>
>>> del wiz.domagic
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: Wizard instance has no attribute 'domagic'
Overriding __dir__ (and getting an InvalidState or NotEnoughMana exception on invocation instead of AttributeError on reference) might be okay, but I can't see how to mimic the built-in behaviour of dir() accurately. (Ideally I'd prefer a way that works in Python 2.5, too)
Ideas?