0

I have a module with one method:

def find_inverse_matrix(C, log=False): 

    n = C.shape[0]

    Cs = C.copy()
    i = 0
    C = np.matrix(np.eye(n))
    B = np.matrix(np.eye(n))
    J = set(range(n))
    S = [0] * n

    if log: print Cs

    while i <= n-1:
        if log: print '\nIteration', i
        f = False
        j = 0
        ei = get_ek(i, n)

        for j in J:
            cj = get_ck(Cs, j)
            alpha = (ei * B * cj)[0, 0]
            if log: print 'alpha%s = %s' % (j, alpha)
            if not(is_zero(alpha)):
                f = True
                break

        if not(f):
            exit('Inverse matrix is not exist')

        J.remove(j)
        S[j] = i
        C[:, i] = Cs[:, j]
        if log: print 'C%s:\n%s' % (i, C)
        D = get_Dkz(i, B * C[:, i])
        if log: print 'D%s:\n%s' % (i, D)
        B = D * B
        if log: print 'B%s:\n%s' % (i, B)

        i += 1
    if log: print '\n S = ', S

    if log: print 'Result'
    R = construct_matrix(B, S)
    if log: print R

    if log: print '\nCheck result:'
    if log: print Cs * R
    return R

If I call this method from this file it shows all print, but if I call if from another all print should be suppressed. Now I use check before every print, but how it do simple and pretty in 'pythonic' style?

2

2 Answers 2

2

Normally, print is a statement in the language. But if you add the line from __future__ import print_function to your imports then it is used as a function. This means two things:

a) You need to use this as a function - meaning print(Cs) instead of print Cs.

b) You can override it, since in python functions are objects you can play with.

You can define your own "my_print" functions which you can later change instead of the builtin print.

Example:

>>> from __future__ import print_function
>>> _print_ = print
>>> def myprint(*arg, **kwarg):
...     _print_("yeah.")
...     _print_(*arg,** kwarg)
...
>>> myprint("ok")
yeah.
ok
>>> print = myprint
>>> print('3')
yeah.
3
>>>

So just write your myprint function so that it'd check for "log" before, and your prints should be the same. Or just override print only when you don't want to suppress printing.

2
  • In this case I need to modify only imported module, right? See example dpaste.de/HPHdw Sep 26, 2013 at 9:54
  • The output is at the bottom? Then it gave you the desired result, right? Sep 26, 2013 at 12:07
1

if __name__ == '__main__': will execute a block of code only if a file is executed directly, not loaded as a module. You can set a flag there to turn on logging.

A more pythonic way might be to pass a log function into the module instead of a flag. That way you could pass in an empty function to suppress logging.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.