Message400627
Python 2.7 had apply(func, args, kwargs) which called func(*args, **kwargs).
https://docs.python.org/2.7/library/functions.html#apply
There is also functools.partial(func, *args, **kwargs)(*args2, **kwargs2) which calls func(*args, *args2, **kwargs, **kwargs2).
https://docs.python.org/dev/library/functools.html#functools.partial
operator.methodcaller(name, /, *args, **kwargs)(obj) calls getattr(obj, name)(*args, **kwargs).
https://docs.python.org/dev/library/operator.html#operator.methodcaller
I'm not convinced that operator.caller() would be useful to me. Why do you consider that it belongs to the stdlib? It is a common pattern? Did you see in this pattern in the current stdlib?
Can't you easily implement such helper function in a few lines of Python?
operator documentation says: "The operator module exports a set of efficient functions corresponding to the intrinsic operators of Python". I don't see how operator.caller() implements an existing "intrinsic operators of Python".
methodcaller() can be implemented in 4 lines of Python, as shown in its documentation:
---
def methodcaller(name, /, *args, **kwargs):
def caller(obj):
return getattr(obj, name)(*args, **kwargs)
return caller
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| Date |
User |
Action |
Args |
| 2021-08-30 15:50:45 | vstinner | set | recipients:
+ vstinner, brett.cannon, rhettinger, mark.dickinson, Antony.Lee, hrik2001 |
| 2021-08-30 15:50:45 | vstinner | set | messageid: <[email protected]> |
| 2021-08-30 15:50:45 | vstinner | link | issue44019 messages |
| 2021-08-30 15:50:45 | vstinner | create | |
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