Sounds obvious, but I didn't even realize that you can put non-string
keys in type dictionaries without using this locals() hack.
This commit is contained in:
parent
5cc774e232
commit
ffae306784
|
@ -27,10 +27,9 @@ class Base(object):
|
|||
class Base2(object):
|
||||
mykey = 'from Base2'
|
||||
|
||||
class X(Base):
|
||||
# you can't add a non-string key to X.__dict__, but it can be
|
||||
# there from the beginning :-)
|
||||
locals()[MyKey()] = 5
|
||||
# you can't add a non-string key to X.__dict__, but it can be
|
||||
# there from the beginning :-)
|
||||
X = type('X', (Base,), {MyKey(): 5})
|
||||
|
||||
print X.mykey
|
||||
# I get a segfault, or a slightly wrong assertion error in a debug build.
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue