Metadata-Version: 1.1
Name: dotobject
Version: 1.2.1
Summary: Dot notation object
Home-page: https://github.com/seperman/dotobject
Author: Seperman
Author-email: sep@zepworks.com
License: MIT
Download-URL: https://github.com/seperman/dotobject/tarball/master
Description: **DotObject v 1.2.1**
        
        Dot Notation Object
        
        Dot lets you define objects in dot notation format.
        
        You need to subclass Dot and define your own load and optionally save methods in order to use the dot notation object.
        
        **Background**
        
        Dot Notation object was originally designed to be the base library for a Redis client for Python. Thus the names 'load' and 'save' come from. The idea was to have python object that simply by writing obj.item="value", it sets the redis key "obj.item" with "value" value.
        And as soon as it detects you are retrieving the value, it gets the latest version from Redis. But in the mean time, it gives you a lazy object till it actually needs the value from Redis.
        
        So the Dot notation object is basically a lazy object that once its "load" and "save" methods are defined, it will run those methods when the object is saved or retrieved.
        
        **Parameters**
        
        root_name : String, Optional.
            It is used to overwrite the Dot object root name.
        
        int_starts_with: String, Optional. Default: i
            It is used to idefntify integer parts since Python does not let integers as attributes.
        
        **Returns**
        
        A lazy object that will be evaluated when it is actually used.
        
        **Examples**
        
        Defining your own Dot
            >>> from dot import Dot
            >>> class This(Dot):
            ...     def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
            ...         super(This, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
            ...         self.items = {}
            ...     def load(self, paths):
            ...         return {i: self.items[i] if i in self.items else "value %s" % i for i in paths}
            ...     def save(self, path, value):
            ...         self.items[path] = value
            ... 
        
        Creating a Dot object
            >>> this = This()
            >>> aa = this.part1.part2.part3.part4
            >>> aa
            <Lazy object: this.part1.part2.part3.part4>
            >>> print(aa)
            value this.part1.part2.part3.part4
            >>> aa
            value this.part1.part2.part3.part4
        
        Dot objects get evaluated in a batch
            >>> this = This()
            >>> aa = this.part1
            >>> aa
            <Lazy object: this.part1>
            >>> bb = this.part2
            >>> bb
            <Lazy object: this.part2>
            >>> print(aa)
            value this.part1
            >>> aa
            value this.part1
            >>> bb
            value this.part2
        
        Dealing with paths that have integers as a part
            >>> bb = this.part1.part2.i120
            >>> bb
            <Lazy object: this.part1.part2.120>
            >>> print bb
            value this.part1.part2.120
        
        Dealing with Dots like dictionary keys
            >>> cc = this['part1.part2.part4']
            >>> cc
            <Lazy object: this.part1.part2.part4>
            >>> dd = this['part1.%s.part4' % 100]
            >>> dd
            <Lazy object: this.part1.100.part4>
            >>> path = 'part1.part2'
            >>> this[path] = 'This was set by a dynamic key.'
            >>> this.path
            This was set by a dynamic key.
        
        
        Saving Dots
            >>> this.part1.part2.part3.part4 = "new value"
            >>> zz = this.part1.part2.part3.part4
            >>> zz
            new value
        
        Changing Root name
            >>> class That(This):
            ...    pass
            >>> that = That()
            >>> aa = that.something
            >>> print(aa)
            value that.something
            >>> bb = this.something
            >>> bb
            <Lazy object: this.something>
        
        Flushing cache
            >>> aa = this.part1
            >>> print aa
            value this.part1
            >>> bb = this.part1 # reads from the cache
            >>> this.flush()
            >>> bb = this.part1 # Will evaluate this.part1 again
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
