Fix OrderedDic.pop() to work for subclasses that define __missing__().

This commit is contained in:
Raymond Hettinger 2011-01-01 23:51:55 +00:00
parent 32062e9be7
commit 345c49b16b
2 changed files with 27 additions and 2 deletions

View file

@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ from reprlib import recursive_repr as _recursive_repr
class _Link(object):
__slots__ = 'prev', 'next', 'key', '__weakref__'
class OrderedDict(dict, MutableMapping):
class OrderedDict(dict):
'Dictionary that remembers insertion order'
# An inherited dict maps keys to values.
# The inherited dict provides __getitem__, __len__, __contains__, and get.
@ -172,12 +172,22 @@ class OrderedDict(dict, MutableMapping):
return size
update = __update = MutableMapping.update
pop = MutableMapping.pop
keys = MutableMapping.keys
values = MutableMapping.values
items = MutableMapping.items
__ne__ = MutableMapping.__ne__
__marker = object()
def pop(self, key, default=__marker):
if key in self:
result = self[key]
del self[key]
return result
if default is self.__marker:
raise KeyError(key)
return default
def setdefault(self, key, default=None):
'OD.setdefault(k[,d]) -> OD.get(k,d), also set OD[k]=d if k not in OD'
if key in self:

View file

@ -834,6 +834,10 @@ class TestOrderedDict(unittest.TestCase):
self.assertEqual(list(d.items()),
[('a', 1), ('b', 2), ('c', 3), ('d', 4), ('e', 5), ('f', 6), ('g', 7)])
def test_abc(self):
self.assertIsInstance(OrderedDict(), MutableMapping)
self.assertTrue(issubclass(OrderedDict, MutableMapping))
def test_clear(self):
pairs = [('c', 1), ('b', 2), ('a', 3), ('d', 4), ('e', 5), ('f', 6)]
shuffle(pairs)
@ -892,6 +896,17 @@ class TestOrderedDict(unittest.TestCase):
self.assertEqual(len(od), 0)
self.assertEqual(od.pop(k, 12345), 12345)
# make sure pop still works when __missing__ is defined
class Missing(OrderedDict):
def __missing__(self, key):
return 0
m = Missing(a=1)
self.assertEqual(m.pop('b', 5), 5)
self.assertEqual(m.pop('a', 6), 1)
self.assertEqual(m.pop('a', 6), 6)
with self.assertRaises(KeyError):
m.pop('a')
def test_equality(self):
pairs = [('c', 1), ('b', 2), ('a', 3), ('d', 4), ('e', 5), ('f', 6)]
shuffle(pairs)