Message98674
Currently applying functools.partial to a callable that is already functools.partial object results in a nested object:
>>> from functools import partial
>>> def f(a,b,c): pass
...
>>> p = partial(partial(f, 1), 2)
>>> p.func, p.args
(<functools.partial object at 0x100431d60>, (2,))
Proposed patch makes partial(partial(f, 1), 2) return partial(f, 1, 2) instead:
>>> p.func, p.args
(<function f at 0x10055d3a8>, (1, 2))
This patch is partially (no pun intended) motivated by a patch submitted by Christophe Simonis for issue4331. Christophe's patch flattens nested partials for a specific case of using partials as bound methods.
As proposed, the patch will enable flattening for subclasses of functools.partial, but will return a baseclass instance. Flattening will also discard any state attached to the nested partial such as __name__, __doc__, etc or any subclass data. I believe this is the right behavior, but this caveat is the reason I classify this patch as a "feature request" rather than "performance" or "resource usage". |
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| Date |
User |
Action |
Args |
| 2010-02-01 19:07:31 | Alexander.Belopolsky | set | recipients:
+ Alexander.Belopolsky |
| 2010-02-01 19:07:31 | Alexander.Belopolsky | set | messageid: <[email protected]> |
| 2010-02-01 19:07:29 | Alexander.Belopolsky | link | issue7830 messages |
| 2010-02-01 19:07:28 | Alexander.Belopolsky | create | |
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