I have a Django model where a lot of fields are choices. So I had to write a lot of "is_something" properties of the class to check whether the instance value is equal to some choice value. Something along the lines of:
class MyModel(models.Model):
some_choicefield = models.IntegerField(choices=SOME_CHOICES)
@property
def is_some_value(self):
return self.some_choicefield == SOME_CHOICES.SOME_CHOICE_VALUE
# a lot of these...
In order to automate this and spare me a lot of redundant code, I thought about patching the instance at creation, with a function that adds a bunch of methods that do the checks. The code became as follows (I'm assuming there's a "normalize" function that makes the label of the choice a usable function name):
def dynamic_add_checks(instance, field):
if hasattr(field, 'choices'):
choices = getattr(field, 'choices')
for (value,label) in choices:
def fun(instance):
return getattr(instance, field.name) == value
normalized_func_name = "is_%s_%s" % (field.name, normalize(label))
setattr(instance, normalized_func_name, fun(instance))
class MyModel(models.Model):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(MyModel).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
dynamic_add_checks(self, self._meta.get_field('some_choicefield')
some_choicefield = models.IntegerField(choices=SOME_CHOICES)
Now, this works but I have the feeling there is a better way to do it. Perhaps at class creation time (with metaclasses or in the new method)? Do you have any thoughts/suggestions about that?