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			1253 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			47 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			1253 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			47 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
| import re
 | |
| import sys
 | |
| import copy
 | |
| import types
 | |
| import inspect
 | |
| import keyword
 | |
| import builtins
 | |
| import functools
 | |
| import _thread
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| __all__ = ['dataclass',
 | |
|            'field',
 | |
|            'Field',
 | |
|            'FrozenInstanceError',
 | |
|            'InitVar',
 | |
|            'MISSING',
 | |
| 
 | |
|            # Helper functions.
 | |
|            'fields',
 | |
|            'asdict',
 | |
|            'astuple',
 | |
|            'make_dataclass',
 | |
|            'replace',
 | |
|            'is_dataclass',
 | |
|            ]
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Conditions for adding methods.  The boxes indicate what action the
 | |
| # dataclass decorator takes.  For all of these tables, when I talk
 | |
| # about init=, repr=, eq=, order=, unsafe_hash=, or frozen=, I'm
 | |
| # referring to the arguments to the @dataclass decorator.  When
 | |
| # checking if a dunder method already exists, I mean check for an
 | |
| # entry in the class's __dict__.  I never check to see if an attribute
 | |
| # is defined in a base class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Key:
 | |
| # +=========+=========================================+
 | |
| # + Value   | Meaning                                 |
 | |
| # +=========+=========================================+
 | |
| # | <blank> | No action: no method is added.          |
 | |
| # +---------+-----------------------------------------+
 | |
| # | add     | Generated method is added.              |
 | |
| # +---------+-----------------------------------------+
 | |
| # | raise   | TypeError is raised.                    |
 | |
| # +---------+-----------------------------------------+
 | |
| # | None    | Attribute is set to None.               |
 | |
| # +=========+=========================================+
 | |
| 
 | |
| # __init__
 | |
| #
 | |
| #   +--- init= parameter
 | |
| #   |
 | |
| #   v     |       |       |
 | |
| #         |  no   |  yes  |  <--- class has __init__ in __dict__?
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| # | False |       |       |
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+
 | |
| # | True  | add   |       |  <- the default
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| 
 | |
| # __repr__
 | |
| #
 | |
| #    +--- repr= parameter
 | |
| #    |
 | |
| #    v    |       |       |
 | |
| #         |  no   |  yes  |  <--- class has __repr__ in __dict__?
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| # | False |       |       |
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+
 | |
| # | True  | add   |       |  <- the default
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # __setattr__
 | |
| # __delattr__
 | |
| #
 | |
| #    +--- frozen= parameter
 | |
| #    |
 | |
| #    v    |       |       |
 | |
| #         |  no   |  yes  |  <--- class has __setattr__ or __delattr__ in __dict__?
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| # | False |       |       |  <- the default
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+
 | |
| # | True  | add   | raise |
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| # Raise because not adding these methods would break the "frozen-ness"
 | |
| # of the class.
 | |
| 
 | |
| # __eq__
 | |
| #
 | |
| #    +--- eq= parameter
 | |
| #    |
 | |
| #    v    |       |       |
 | |
| #         |  no   |  yes  |  <--- class has __eq__ in __dict__?
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| # | False |       |       |
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+
 | |
| # | True  | add   |       |  <- the default
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| 
 | |
| # __lt__
 | |
| # __le__
 | |
| # __gt__
 | |
| # __ge__
 | |
| #
 | |
| #    +--- order= parameter
 | |
| #    |
 | |
| #    v    |       |       |
 | |
| #         |  no   |  yes  |  <--- class has any comparison method in __dict__?
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| # | False |       |       |  <- the default
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+
 | |
| # | True  | add   | raise |
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+
 | |
| # Raise because to allow this case would interfere with using
 | |
| # functools.total_ordering.
 | |
| 
 | |
| # __hash__
 | |
| 
 | |
| #    +------------------- unsafe_hash= parameter
 | |
| #    |       +----------- eq= parameter
 | |
| #    |       |       +--- frozen= parameter
 | |
| #    |       |       |
 | |
| #    v       v       v    |        |        |
 | |
| #                         |   no   |  yes   |  <--- class has explicitly defined __hash__
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+========+========+
 | |
| # | False | False | False |        |        | No __eq__, use the base class __hash__
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+
 | |
| # | False | False | True  |        |        | No __eq__, use the base class __hash__
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+
 | |
| # | False | True  | False | None   |        | <-- the default, not hashable
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+
 | |
| # | False | True  | True  | add    |        | Frozen, so hashable, allows override
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+
 | |
| # | True  | False | False | add    | raise  | Has no __eq__, but hashable
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+
 | |
| # | True  | False | True  | add    | raise  | Has no __eq__, but hashable
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+
 | |
| # | True  | True  | False | add    | raise  | Not frozen, but hashable
 | |
| # +-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+
 | |
| # | True  | True  | True  | add    | raise  | Frozen, so hashable
 | |
| # +=======+=======+=======+========+========+
 | |
| # For boxes that are blank, __hash__ is untouched and therefore
 | |
| # inherited from the base class.  If the base is object, then
 | |
| # id-based hashing is used.
 | |
| #
 | |
| # Note that a class may already have __hash__=None if it specified an
 | |
| # __eq__ method in the class body (not one that was created by
 | |
| # @dataclass).
 | |
| #
 | |
| # See _hash_action (below) for a coded version of this table.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Raised when an attempt is made to modify a frozen class.
 | |
| class FrozenInstanceError(AttributeError): pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| # A sentinel object for default values to signal that a default
 | |
| # factory will be used.  This is given a nice repr() which will appear
 | |
| # in the function signature of dataclasses' constructors.
 | |
| class _HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY_CLASS:
 | |
|     def __repr__(self):
 | |
|         return '<factory>'
 | |
| _HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY = _HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY_CLASS()
 | |
| 
 | |
| # A sentinel object to detect if a parameter is supplied or not.  Use
 | |
| # a class to give it a better repr.
 | |
| class _MISSING_TYPE:
 | |
|     pass
 | |
| MISSING = _MISSING_TYPE()
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Since most per-field metadata will be unused, create an empty
 | |
| # read-only proxy that can be shared among all fields.
 | |
| _EMPTY_METADATA = types.MappingProxyType({})
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Markers for the various kinds of fields and pseudo-fields.
 | |
| class _FIELD_BASE:
 | |
|     def __init__(self, name):
 | |
|         self.name = name
 | |
|     def __repr__(self):
 | |
|         return self.name
 | |
| _FIELD = _FIELD_BASE('_FIELD')
 | |
| _FIELD_CLASSVAR = _FIELD_BASE('_FIELD_CLASSVAR')
 | |
| _FIELD_INITVAR = _FIELD_BASE('_FIELD_INITVAR')
 | |
| 
 | |
| # The name of an attribute on the class where we store the Field
 | |
| # objects.  Also used to check if a class is a Data Class.
 | |
| _FIELDS = '__dataclass_fields__'
 | |
| 
 | |
| # The name of an attribute on the class that stores the parameters to
 | |
| # @dataclass.
 | |
| _PARAMS = '__dataclass_params__'
 | |
| 
 | |
| # The name of the function, that if it exists, is called at the end of
 | |
| # __init__.
 | |
| _POST_INIT_NAME = '__post_init__'
 | |
| 
 | |
| # String regex that string annotations for ClassVar or InitVar must match.
 | |
| # Allows "identifier.identifier[" or "identifier[".
 | |
| # https://bugs.python.org/issue33453 for details.
 | |
| _MODULE_IDENTIFIER_RE = re.compile(r'^(?:\s*(\w+)\s*\.)?\s*(\w+)')
 | |
| 
 | |
| class _InitVarMeta(type):
 | |
|     def __getitem__(self, params):
 | |
|         return self
 | |
| 
 | |
| class InitVar(metaclass=_InitVarMeta):
 | |
|     pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Instances of Field are only ever created from within this module,
 | |
| # and only from the field() function, although Field instances are
 | |
| # exposed externally as (conceptually) read-only objects.
 | |
| #
 | |
| # name and type are filled in after the fact, not in __init__.
 | |
| # They're not known at the time this class is instantiated, but it's
 | |
| # convenient if they're available later.
 | |
| #
 | |
| # When cls._FIELDS is filled in with a list of Field objects, the name
 | |
| # and type fields will have been populated.
 | |
| class Field:
 | |
|     __slots__ = ('name',
 | |
|                  'type',
 | |
|                  'default',
 | |
|                  'default_factory',
 | |
|                  'repr',
 | |
|                  'hash',
 | |
|                  'init',
 | |
|                  'compare',
 | |
|                  'metadata',
 | |
|                  '_field_type',  # Private: not to be used by user code.
 | |
|                  )
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self, default, default_factory, init, repr, hash, compare,
 | |
|                  metadata):
 | |
|         self.name = None
 | |
|         self.type = None
 | |
|         self.default = default
 | |
|         self.default_factory = default_factory
 | |
|         self.init = init
 | |
|         self.repr = repr
 | |
|         self.hash = hash
 | |
|         self.compare = compare
 | |
|         self.metadata = (_EMPTY_METADATA
 | |
|                          if metadata is None else
 | |
|                          types.MappingProxyType(metadata))
 | |
|         self._field_type = None
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __repr__(self):
 | |
|         return ('Field('
 | |
|                 f'name={self.name!r},'
 | |
|                 f'type={self.type!r},'
 | |
|                 f'default={self.default!r},'
 | |
|                 f'default_factory={self.default_factory!r},'
 | |
|                 f'init={self.init!r},'
 | |
|                 f'repr={self.repr!r},'
 | |
|                 f'hash={self.hash!r},'
 | |
|                 f'compare={self.compare!r},'
 | |
|                 f'metadata={self.metadata!r},'
 | |
|                 f'_field_type={self._field_type}'
 | |
|                 ')')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # This is used to support the PEP 487 __set_name__ protocol in the
 | |
|     # case where we're using a field that contains a descriptor as a
 | |
|     # default value.  For details on __set_name__, see
 | |
|     # https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0487/#implementation-details.
 | |
|     #
 | |
|     # Note that in _process_class, this Field object is overwritten
 | |
|     # with the default value, so the end result is a descriptor that
 | |
|     # had __set_name__ called on it at the right time.
 | |
|     def __set_name__(self, owner, name):
 | |
|         func = getattr(type(self.default), '__set_name__', None)
 | |
|         if func:
 | |
|             # There is a __set_name__ method on the descriptor, call
 | |
|             # it.
 | |
|             func(self.default, owner, name)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class _DataclassParams:
 | |
|     __slots__ = ('init',
 | |
|                  'repr',
 | |
|                  'eq',
 | |
|                  'order',
 | |
|                  'unsafe_hash',
 | |
|                  'frozen',
 | |
|                  )
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self, init, repr, eq, order, unsafe_hash, frozen):
 | |
|         self.init = init
 | |
|         self.repr = repr
 | |
|         self.eq = eq
 | |
|         self.order = order
 | |
|         self.unsafe_hash = unsafe_hash
 | |
|         self.frozen = frozen
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __repr__(self):
 | |
|         return ('_DataclassParams('
 | |
|                 f'init={self.init!r},'
 | |
|                 f'repr={self.repr!r},'
 | |
|                 f'eq={self.eq!r},'
 | |
|                 f'order={self.order!r},'
 | |
|                 f'unsafe_hash={self.unsafe_hash!r},'
 | |
|                 f'frozen={self.frozen!r}'
 | |
|                 ')')
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # This function is used instead of exposing Field creation directly,
 | |
| # so that a type checker can be told (via overloads) that this is a
 | |
| # function whose type depends on its parameters.
 | |
| def field(*, default=MISSING, default_factory=MISSING, init=True, repr=True,
 | |
|           hash=None, compare=True, metadata=None):
 | |
|     """Return an object to identify dataclass fields.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     default is the default value of the field.  default_factory is a
 | |
|     0-argument function called to initialize a field's value.  If init
 | |
|     is True, the field will be a parameter to the class's __init__()
 | |
|     function.  If repr is True, the field will be included in the
 | |
|     object's repr().  If hash is True, the field will be included in
 | |
|     the object's hash().  If compare is True, the field will be used
 | |
|     in comparison functions.  metadata, if specified, must be a
 | |
|     mapping which is stored but not otherwise examined by dataclass.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     It is an error to specify both default and default_factory.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if default is not MISSING and default_factory is not MISSING:
 | |
|         raise ValueError('cannot specify both default and default_factory')
 | |
|     return Field(default, default_factory, init, repr, hash, compare,
 | |
|                  metadata)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _tuple_str(obj_name, fields):
 | |
|     # Return a string representing each field of obj_name as a tuple
 | |
|     # member.  So, if fields is ['x', 'y'] and obj_name is "self",
 | |
|     # return "(self.x,self.y)".
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Special case for the 0-tuple.
 | |
|     if not fields:
 | |
|         return '()'
 | |
|     # Note the trailing comma, needed if this turns out to be a 1-tuple.
 | |
|     return f'({",".join([f"{obj_name}.{f.name}" for f in fields])},)'
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # This function's logic is copied from "recursive_repr" function in
 | |
| # reprlib module to avoid dependency.
 | |
| def _recursive_repr(user_function):
 | |
|     # Decorator to make a repr function return "..." for a recursive
 | |
|     # call.
 | |
|     repr_running = set()
 | |
| 
 | |
|     @functools.wraps(user_function)
 | |
|     def wrapper(self):
 | |
|         key = id(self), _thread.get_ident()
 | |
|         if key in repr_running:
 | |
|             return '...'
 | |
|         repr_running.add(key)
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             result = user_function(self)
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             repr_running.discard(key)
 | |
|         return result
 | |
|     return wrapper
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _create_fn(name, args, body, *, globals=None, locals=None,
 | |
|                return_type=MISSING):
 | |
|     # Note that we mutate locals when exec() is called.  Caller
 | |
|     # beware!  The only callers are internal to this module, so no
 | |
|     # worries about external callers.
 | |
|     if locals is None:
 | |
|         locals = {}
 | |
|     # __builtins__ may be the "builtins" module or
 | |
|     # the value of its "__dict__",
 | |
|     # so make sure "__builtins__" is the module.
 | |
|     if globals is not None and '__builtins__' not in globals:
 | |
|         globals['__builtins__'] = builtins
 | |
|     return_annotation = ''
 | |
|     if return_type is not MISSING:
 | |
|         locals['_return_type'] = return_type
 | |
|         return_annotation = '->_return_type'
 | |
|     args = ','.join(args)
 | |
|     body = '\n'.join(f' {b}' for b in body)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Compute the text of the entire function.
 | |
|     txt = f'def {name}({args}){return_annotation}:\n{body}'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     exec(txt, globals, locals)
 | |
|     return locals[name]
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _field_assign(frozen, name, value, self_name):
 | |
|     # If we're a frozen class, then assign to our fields in __init__
 | |
|     # via object.__setattr__.  Otherwise, just use a simple
 | |
|     # assignment.
 | |
|     #
 | |
|     # self_name is what "self" is called in this function: don't
 | |
|     # hard-code "self", since that might be a field name.
 | |
|     if frozen:
 | |
|         return f'__builtins__.object.__setattr__({self_name},{name!r},{value})'
 | |
|     return f'{self_name}.{name}={value}'
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _field_init(f, frozen, globals, self_name):
 | |
|     # Return the text of the line in the body of __init__ that will
 | |
|     # initialize this field.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     default_name = f'_dflt_{f.name}'
 | |
|     if f.default_factory is not MISSING:
 | |
|         if f.init:
 | |
|             # This field has a default factory.  If a parameter is
 | |
|             # given, use it.  If not, call the factory.
 | |
|             globals[default_name] = f.default_factory
 | |
|             value = (f'{default_name}() '
 | |
|                      f'if {f.name} is _HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY '
 | |
|                      f'else {f.name}')
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             # This is a field that's not in the __init__ params, but
 | |
|             # has a default factory function.  It needs to be
 | |
|             # initialized here by calling the factory function,
 | |
|             # because there's no other way to initialize it.
 | |
| 
 | |
|             # For a field initialized with a default=defaultvalue, the
 | |
|             # class dict just has the default value
 | |
|             # (cls.fieldname=defaultvalue).  But that won't work for a
 | |
|             # default factory, the factory must be called in __init__
 | |
|             # and we must assign that to self.fieldname.  We can't
 | |
|             # fall back to the class dict's value, both because it's
 | |
|             # not set, and because it might be different per-class
 | |
|             # (which, after all, is why we have a factory function!).
 | |
| 
 | |
|             globals[default_name] = f.default_factory
 | |
|             value = f'{default_name}()'
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         # No default factory.
 | |
|         if f.init:
 | |
|             if f.default is MISSING:
 | |
|                 # There's no default, just do an assignment.
 | |
|                 value = f.name
 | |
|             elif f.default is not MISSING:
 | |
|                 globals[default_name] = f.default
 | |
|                 value = f.name
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             # This field does not need initialization.  Signify that
 | |
|             # to the caller by returning None.
 | |
|             return None
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Only test this now, so that we can create variables for the
 | |
|     # default.  However, return None to signify that we're not going
 | |
|     # to actually do the assignment statement for InitVars.
 | |
|     if f._field_type is _FIELD_INITVAR:
 | |
|         return None
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Now, actually generate the field assignment.
 | |
|     return _field_assign(frozen, f.name, value, self_name)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _init_param(f):
 | |
|     # Return the __init__ parameter string for this field.  For
 | |
|     # example, the equivalent of 'x:int=3' (except instead of 'int',
 | |
|     # reference a variable set to int, and instead of '3', reference a
 | |
|     # variable set to 3).
 | |
|     if f.default is MISSING and f.default_factory is MISSING:
 | |
|         # There's no default, and no default_factory, just output the
 | |
|         # variable name and type.
 | |
|         default = ''
 | |
|     elif f.default is not MISSING:
 | |
|         # There's a default, this will be the name that's used to look
 | |
|         # it up.
 | |
|         default = f'=_dflt_{f.name}'
 | |
|     elif f.default_factory is not MISSING:
 | |
|         # There's a factory function.  Set a marker.
 | |
|         default = '=_HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY'
 | |
|     return f'{f.name}:_type_{f.name}{default}'
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _init_fn(fields, frozen, has_post_init, self_name):
 | |
|     # fields contains both real fields and InitVar pseudo-fields.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Make sure we don't have fields without defaults following fields
 | |
|     # with defaults.  This actually would be caught when exec-ing the
 | |
|     # function source code, but catching it here gives a better error
 | |
|     # message, and future-proofs us in case we build up the function
 | |
|     # using ast.
 | |
|     seen_default = False
 | |
|     for f in fields:
 | |
|         # Only consider fields in the __init__ call.
 | |
|         if f.init:
 | |
|             if not (f.default is MISSING and f.default_factory is MISSING):
 | |
|                 seen_default = True
 | |
|             elif seen_default:
 | |
|                 raise TypeError(f'non-default argument {f.name!r} '
 | |
|                                 'follows default argument')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     globals = {'MISSING': MISSING,
 | |
|                '_HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY': _HAS_DEFAULT_FACTORY}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     body_lines = []
 | |
|     for f in fields:
 | |
|         line = _field_init(f, frozen, globals, self_name)
 | |
|         # line is None means that this field doesn't require
 | |
|         # initialization (it's a pseudo-field).  Just skip it.
 | |
|         if line:
 | |
|             body_lines.append(line)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Does this class have a post-init function?
 | |
|     if has_post_init:
 | |
|         params_str = ','.join(f.name for f in fields
 | |
|                               if f._field_type is _FIELD_INITVAR)
 | |
|         body_lines.append(f'{self_name}.{_POST_INIT_NAME}({params_str})')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # If no body lines, use 'pass'.
 | |
|     if not body_lines:
 | |
|         body_lines = ['pass']
 | |
| 
 | |
|     locals = {f'_type_{f.name}': f.type for f in fields}
 | |
|     return _create_fn('__init__',
 | |
|                       [self_name] + [_init_param(f) for f in fields if f.init],
 | |
|                       body_lines,
 | |
|                       locals=locals,
 | |
|                       globals=globals,
 | |
|                       return_type=None)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _repr_fn(fields):
 | |
|     fn = _create_fn('__repr__',
 | |
|                     ('self',),
 | |
|                     ['return self.__class__.__qualname__ + f"(' +
 | |
|                      ', '.join([f"{f.name}={{self.{f.name}!r}}"
 | |
|                                 for f in fields]) +
 | |
|                      ')"'])
 | |
|     return _recursive_repr(fn)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _frozen_get_del_attr(cls, fields):
 | |
|     # XXX: globals is modified on the first call to _create_fn, then
 | |
|     # the modified version is used in the second call.  Is this okay?
 | |
|     globals = {'cls': cls,
 | |
|               'FrozenInstanceError': FrozenInstanceError}
 | |
|     if fields:
 | |
|         fields_str = '(' + ','.join(repr(f.name) for f in fields) + ',)'
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         # Special case for the zero-length tuple.
 | |
|         fields_str = '()'
 | |
|     return (_create_fn('__setattr__',
 | |
|                       ('self', 'name', 'value'),
 | |
|                       (f'if type(self) is cls or name in {fields_str}:',
 | |
|                         ' raise FrozenInstanceError(f"cannot assign to field {name!r}")',
 | |
|                        f'super(cls, self).__setattr__(name, value)'),
 | |
|                        globals=globals),
 | |
|             _create_fn('__delattr__',
 | |
|                       ('self', 'name'),
 | |
|                       (f'if type(self) is cls or name in {fields_str}:',
 | |
|                         ' raise FrozenInstanceError(f"cannot delete field {name!r}")',
 | |
|                        f'super(cls, self).__delattr__(name)'),
 | |
|                        globals=globals),
 | |
|             )
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _cmp_fn(name, op, self_tuple, other_tuple):
 | |
|     # Create a comparison function.  If the fields in the object are
 | |
|     # named 'x' and 'y', then self_tuple is the string
 | |
|     # '(self.x,self.y)' and other_tuple is the string
 | |
|     # '(other.x,other.y)'.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     return _create_fn(name,
 | |
|                       ('self', 'other'),
 | |
|                       [ 'if other.__class__ is self.__class__:',
 | |
|                        f' return {self_tuple}{op}{other_tuple}',
 | |
|                         'return NotImplemented'])
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _hash_fn(fields):
 | |
|     self_tuple = _tuple_str('self', fields)
 | |
|     return _create_fn('__hash__',
 | |
|                       ('self',),
 | |
|                       [f'return hash({self_tuple})'])
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _is_classvar(a_type, typing):
 | |
|     # This test uses a typing internal class, but it's the best way to
 | |
|     # test if this is a ClassVar.
 | |
|     return (a_type is typing.ClassVar
 | |
|             or (type(a_type) is typing._GenericAlias
 | |
|                 and a_type.__origin__ is typing.ClassVar))
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _is_initvar(a_type, dataclasses):
 | |
|     # The module we're checking against is the module we're
 | |
|     # currently in (dataclasses.py).
 | |
|     return a_type is dataclasses.InitVar
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _is_type(annotation, cls, a_module, a_type, is_type_predicate):
 | |
|     # Given a type annotation string, does it refer to a_type in
 | |
|     # a_module?  For example, when checking that annotation denotes a
 | |
|     # ClassVar, then a_module is typing, and a_type is
 | |
|     # typing.ClassVar.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # It's possible to look up a_module given a_type, but it involves
 | |
|     # looking in sys.modules (again!), and seems like a waste since
 | |
|     # the caller already knows a_module.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # - annotation is a string type annotation
 | |
|     # - cls is the class that this annotation was found in
 | |
|     # - a_module is the module we want to match
 | |
|     # - a_type is the type in that module we want to match
 | |
|     # - is_type_predicate is a function called with (obj, a_module)
 | |
|     #   that determines if obj is of the desired type.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Since this test does not do a local namespace lookup (and
 | |
|     # instead only a module (global) lookup), there are some things it
 | |
|     # gets wrong.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # With string annotations, cv0 will be detected as a ClassVar:
 | |
|     #   CV = ClassVar
 | |
|     #   @dataclass
 | |
|     #   class C0:
 | |
|     #     cv0: CV
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # But in this example cv1 will not be detected as a ClassVar:
 | |
|     #   @dataclass
 | |
|     #   class C1:
 | |
|     #     CV = ClassVar
 | |
|     #     cv1: CV
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # In C1, the code in this function (_is_type) will look up "CV" in
 | |
|     # the module and not find it, so it will not consider cv1 as a
 | |
|     # ClassVar.  This is a fairly obscure corner case, and the best
 | |
|     # way to fix it would be to eval() the string "CV" with the
 | |
|     # correct global and local namespaces.  However that would involve
 | |
|     # a eval() penalty for every single field of every dataclass
 | |
|     # that's defined.  It was judged not worth it.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     match = _MODULE_IDENTIFIER_RE.match(annotation)
 | |
|     if match:
 | |
|         ns = None
 | |
|         module_name = match.group(1)
 | |
|         if not module_name:
 | |
|             # No module name, assume the class's module did
 | |
|             # "from dataclasses import InitVar".
 | |
|             ns = sys.modules.get(cls.__module__).__dict__
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             # Look up module_name in the class's module.
 | |
|             module = sys.modules.get(cls.__module__)
 | |
|             if module and module.__dict__.get(module_name) is a_module:
 | |
|                 ns = sys.modules.get(a_type.__module__).__dict__
 | |
|         if ns and is_type_predicate(ns.get(match.group(2)), a_module):
 | |
|             return True
 | |
|     return False
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _get_field(cls, a_name, a_type):
 | |
|     # Return a Field object for this field name and type.  ClassVars
 | |
|     # and InitVars are also returned, but marked as such (see
 | |
|     # f._field_type).
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # If the default value isn't derived from Field, then it's only a
 | |
|     # normal default value.  Convert it to a Field().
 | |
|     default = getattr(cls, a_name, MISSING)
 | |
|     if isinstance(default, Field):
 | |
|         f = default
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         if isinstance(default, types.MemberDescriptorType):
 | |
|             # This is a field in __slots__, so it has no default value.
 | |
|             default = MISSING
 | |
|         f = field(default=default)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Only at this point do we know the name and the type.  Set them.
 | |
|     f.name = a_name
 | |
|     f.type = a_type
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Assume it's a normal field until proven otherwise.  We're next
 | |
|     # going to decide if it's a ClassVar or InitVar, everything else
 | |
|     # is just a normal field.
 | |
|     f._field_type = _FIELD
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # In addition to checking for actual types here, also check for
 | |
|     # string annotations.  get_type_hints() won't always work for us
 | |
|     # (see https://github.com/python/typing/issues/508 for example),
 | |
|     # plus it's expensive and would require an eval for every stirng
 | |
|     # annotation.  So, make a best effort to see if this is a ClassVar
 | |
|     # or InitVar using regex's and checking that the thing referenced
 | |
|     # is actually of the correct type.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # For the complete discussion, see https://bugs.python.org/issue33453
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # If typing has not been imported, then it's impossible for any
 | |
|     # annotation to be a ClassVar.  So, only look for ClassVar if
 | |
|     # typing has been imported by any module (not necessarily cls's
 | |
|     # module).
 | |
|     typing = sys.modules.get('typing')
 | |
|     if typing:
 | |
|         if (_is_classvar(a_type, typing)
 | |
|             or (isinstance(f.type, str)
 | |
|                 and _is_type(f.type, cls, typing, typing.ClassVar,
 | |
|                              _is_classvar))):
 | |
|             f._field_type = _FIELD_CLASSVAR
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # If the type is InitVar, or if it's a matching string annotation,
 | |
|     # then it's an InitVar.
 | |
|     if f._field_type is _FIELD:
 | |
|         # The module we're checking against is the module we're
 | |
|         # currently in (dataclasses.py).
 | |
|         dataclasses = sys.modules[__name__]
 | |
|         if (_is_initvar(a_type, dataclasses)
 | |
|             or (isinstance(f.type, str)
 | |
|                 and _is_type(f.type, cls, dataclasses, dataclasses.InitVar,
 | |
|                              _is_initvar))):
 | |
|             f._field_type = _FIELD_INITVAR
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Validations for individual fields.  This is delayed until now,
 | |
|     # instead of in the Field() constructor, since only here do we
 | |
|     # know the field name, which allows for better error reporting.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Special restrictions for ClassVar and InitVar.
 | |
|     if f._field_type in (_FIELD_CLASSVAR, _FIELD_INITVAR):
 | |
|         if f.default_factory is not MISSING:
 | |
|             raise TypeError(f'field {f.name} cannot have a '
 | |
|                             'default factory')
 | |
|         # Should I check for other field settings? default_factory
 | |
|         # seems the most serious to check for.  Maybe add others.  For
 | |
|         # example, how about init=False (or really,
 | |
|         # init=<not-the-default-init-value>)?  It makes no sense for
 | |
|         # ClassVar and InitVar to specify init=<anything>.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # For real fields, disallow mutable defaults for known types.
 | |
|     if f._field_type is _FIELD and isinstance(f.default, (list, dict, set)):
 | |
|         raise ValueError(f'mutable default {type(f.default)} for field '
 | |
|                          f'{f.name} is not allowed: use default_factory')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     return f
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _set_new_attribute(cls, name, value):
 | |
|     # Never overwrites an existing attribute.  Returns True if the
 | |
|     # attribute already exists.
 | |
|     if name in cls.__dict__:
 | |
|         return True
 | |
|     setattr(cls, name, value)
 | |
|     return False
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Decide if/how we're going to create a hash function.  Key is
 | |
| # (unsafe_hash, eq, frozen, does-hash-exist).  Value is the action to
 | |
| # take.  The common case is to do nothing, so instead of providing a
 | |
| # function that is a no-op, use None to signify that.
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _hash_set_none(cls, fields):
 | |
|     return None
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _hash_add(cls, fields):
 | |
|     flds = [f for f in fields if (f.compare if f.hash is None else f.hash)]
 | |
|     return _hash_fn(flds)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _hash_exception(cls, fields):
 | |
|     # Raise an exception.
 | |
|     raise TypeError(f'Cannot overwrite attribute __hash__ '
 | |
|                     f'in class {cls.__name__}')
 | |
| 
 | |
| #
 | |
| #                +-------------------------------------- unsafe_hash?
 | |
| #                |      +------------------------------- eq?
 | |
| #                |      |      +------------------------ frozen?
 | |
| #                |      |      |      +----------------  has-explicit-hash?
 | |
| #                |      |      |      |
 | |
| #                |      |      |      |        +-------  action
 | |
| #                |      |      |      |        |
 | |
| #                v      v      v      v        v
 | |
| _hash_action = {(False, False, False, False): None,
 | |
|                 (False, False, False, True ): None,
 | |
|                 (False, False, True,  False): None,
 | |
|                 (False, False, True,  True ): None,
 | |
|                 (False, True,  False, False): _hash_set_none,
 | |
|                 (False, True,  False, True ): None,
 | |
|                 (False, True,  True,  False): _hash_add,
 | |
|                 (False, True,  True,  True ): None,
 | |
|                 (True,  False, False, False): _hash_add,
 | |
|                 (True,  False, False, True ): _hash_exception,
 | |
|                 (True,  False, True,  False): _hash_add,
 | |
|                 (True,  False, True,  True ): _hash_exception,
 | |
|                 (True,  True,  False, False): _hash_add,
 | |
|                 (True,  True,  False, True ): _hash_exception,
 | |
|                 (True,  True,  True,  False): _hash_add,
 | |
|                 (True,  True,  True,  True ): _hash_exception,
 | |
|                 }
 | |
| # See https://bugs.python.org/issue32929#msg312829 for an if-statement
 | |
| # version of this table.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _process_class(cls, init, repr, eq, order, unsafe_hash, frozen):
 | |
|     # Now that dicts retain insertion order, there's no reason to use
 | |
|     # an ordered dict.  I am leveraging that ordering here, because
 | |
|     # derived class fields overwrite base class fields, but the order
 | |
|     # is defined by the base class, which is found first.
 | |
|     fields = {}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     setattr(cls, _PARAMS, _DataclassParams(init, repr, eq, order,
 | |
|                                            unsafe_hash, frozen))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Find our base classes in reverse MRO order, and exclude
 | |
|     # ourselves.  In reversed order so that more derived classes
 | |
|     # override earlier field definitions in base classes.  As long as
 | |
|     # we're iterating over them, see if any are frozen.
 | |
|     any_frozen_base = False
 | |
|     has_dataclass_bases = False
 | |
|     for b in cls.__mro__[-1:0:-1]:
 | |
|         # Only process classes that have been processed by our
 | |
|         # decorator.  That is, they have a _FIELDS attribute.
 | |
|         base_fields = getattr(b, _FIELDS, None)
 | |
|         if base_fields:
 | |
|             has_dataclass_bases = True
 | |
|             for f in base_fields.values():
 | |
|                 fields[f.name] = f
 | |
|             if getattr(b, _PARAMS).frozen:
 | |
|                 any_frozen_base = True
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Annotations that are defined in this class (not in base
 | |
|     # classes).  If __annotations__ isn't present, then this class
 | |
|     # adds no new annotations.  We use this to compute fields that are
 | |
|     # added by this class.
 | |
|     #
 | |
|     # Fields are found from cls_annotations, which is guaranteed to be
 | |
|     # ordered.  Default values are from class attributes, if a field
 | |
|     # has a default.  If the default value is a Field(), then it
 | |
|     # contains additional info beyond (and possibly including) the
 | |
|     # actual default value.  Pseudo-fields ClassVars and InitVars are
 | |
|     # included, despite the fact that they're not real fields.  That's
 | |
|     # dealt with later.
 | |
|     cls_annotations = cls.__dict__.get('__annotations__', {})
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Now find fields in our class.  While doing so, validate some
 | |
|     # things, and set the default values (as class attributes) where
 | |
|     # we can.
 | |
|     cls_fields = [_get_field(cls, name, type)
 | |
|                   for name, type in cls_annotations.items()]
 | |
|     for f in cls_fields:
 | |
|         fields[f.name] = f
 | |
| 
 | |
|         # If the class attribute (which is the default value for this
 | |
|         # field) exists and is of type 'Field', replace it with the
 | |
|         # real default.  This is so that normal class introspection
 | |
|         # sees a real default value, not a Field.
 | |
|         if isinstance(getattr(cls, f.name, None), Field):
 | |
|             if f.default is MISSING:
 | |
|                 # If there's no default, delete the class attribute.
 | |
|                 # This happens if we specify field(repr=False), for
 | |
|                 # example (that is, we specified a field object, but
 | |
|                 # no default value).  Also if we're using a default
 | |
|                 # factory.  The class attribute should not be set at
 | |
|                 # all in the post-processed class.
 | |
|                 delattr(cls, f.name)
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 setattr(cls, f.name, f.default)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Do we have any Field members that don't also have annotations?
 | |
|     for name, value in cls.__dict__.items():
 | |
|         if isinstance(value, Field) and not name in cls_annotations:
 | |
|             raise TypeError(f'{name!r} is a field but has no type annotation')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Check rules that apply if we are derived from any dataclasses.
 | |
|     if has_dataclass_bases:
 | |
|         # Raise an exception if any of our bases are frozen, but we're not.
 | |
|         if any_frozen_base and not frozen:
 | |
|             raise TypeError('cannot inherit non-frozen dataclass from a '
 | |
|                             'frozen one')
 | |
| 
 | |
|         # Raise an exception if we're frozen, but none of our bases are.
 | |
|         if not any_frozen_base and frozen:
 | |
|             raise TypeError('cannot inherit frozen dataclass from a '
 | |
|                             'non-frozen one')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Remember all of the fields on our class (including bases).  This
 | |
|     # also marks this class as being a dataclass.
 | |
|     setattr(cls, _FIELDS, fields)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Was this class defined with an explicit __hash__?  Note that if
 | |
|     # __eq__ is defined in this class, then python will automatically
 | |
|     # set __hash__ to None.  This is a heuristic, as it's possible
 | |
|     # that such a __hash__ == None was not auto-generated, but it
 | |
|     # close enough.
 | |
|     class_hash = cls.__dict__.get('__hash__', MISSING)
 | |
|     has_explicit_hash = not (class_hash is MISSING or
 | |
|                              (class_hash is None and '__eq__' in cls.__dict__))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # If we're generating ordering methods, we must be generating the
 | |
|     # eq methods.
 | |
|     if order and not eq:
 | |
|         raise ValueError('eq must be true if order is true')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if init:
 | |
|         # Does this class have a post-init function?
 | |
|         has_post_init = hasattr(cls, _POST_INIT_NAME)
 | |
| 
 | |
|         # Include InitVars and regular fields (so, not ClassVars).
 | |
|         flds = [f for f in fields.values()
 | |
|                 if f._field_type in (_FIELD, _FIELD_INITVAR)]
 | |
|         _set_new_attribute(cls, '__init__',
 | |
|                            _init_fn(flds,
 | |
|                                     frozen,
 | |
|                                     has_post_init,
 | |
|                                     # The name to use for the "self"
 | |
|                                     # param in __init__.  Use "self"
 | |
|                                     # if possible.
 | |
|                                     '__dataclass_self__' if 'self' in fields
 | |
|                                             else 'self',
 | |
|                           ))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Get the fields as a list, and include only real fields.  This is
 | |
|     # used in all of the following methods.
 | |
|     field_list = [f for f in fields.values() if f._field_type is _FIELD]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if repr:
 | |
|         flds = [f for f in field_list if f.repr]
 | |
|         _set_new_attribute(cls, '__repr__', _repr_fn(flds))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if eq:
 | |
|         # Create _eq__ method.  There's no need for a __ne__ method,
 | |
|         # since python will call __eq__ and negate it.
 | |
|         flds = [f for f in field_list if f.compare]
 | |
|         self_tuple = _tuple_str('self', flds)
 | |
|         other_tuple = _tuple_str('other', flds)
 | |
|         _set_new_attribute(cls, '__eq__',
 | |
|                            _cmp_fn('__eq__', '==',
 | |
|                                    self_tuple, other_tuple))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if order:
 | |
|         # Create and set the ordering methods.
 | |
|         flds = [f for f in field_list if f.compare]
 | |
|         self_tuple = _tuple_str('self', flds)
 | |
|         other_tuple = _tuple_str('other', flds)
 | |
|         for name, op in [('__lt__', '<'),
 | |
|                          ('__le__', '<='),
 | |
|                          ('__gt__', '>'),
 | |
|                          ('__ge__', '>='),
 | |
|                          ]:
 | |
|             if _set_new_attribute(cls, name,
 | |
|                                   _cmp_fn(name, op, self_tuple, other_tuple)):
 | |
|                 raise TypeError(f'Cannot overwrite attribute {name} '
 | |
|                                 f'in class {cls.__name__}. Consider using '
 | |
|                                 'functools.total_ordering')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if frozen:
 | |
|         for fn in _frozen_get_del_attr(cls, field_list):
 | |
|             if _set_new_attribute(cls, fn.__name__, fn):
 | |
|                 raise TypeError(f'Cannot overwrite attribute {fn.__name__} '
 | |
|                                 f'in class {cls.__name__}')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Decide if/how we're going to create a hash function.
 | |
|     hash_action = _hash_action[bool(unsafe_hash),
 | |
|                                bool(eq),
 | |
|                                bool(frozen),
 | |
|                                has_explicit_hash]
 | |
|     if hash_action:
 | |
|         # No need to call _set_new_attribute here, since by the time
 | |
|         # we're here the overwriting is unconditional.
 | |
|         cls.__hash__ = hash_action(cls, field_list)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if not getattr(cls, '__doc__'):
 | |
|         # Create a class doc-string.
 | |
|         cls.__doc__ = (cls.__name__ +
 | |
|                        str(inspect.signature(cls)).replace(' -> None', ''))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     return cls
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # _cls should never be specified by keyword, so start it with an
 | |
| # underscore.  The presence of _cls is used to detect if this
 | |
| # decorator is being called with parameters or not.
 | |
| def dataclass(_cls=None, *, init=True, repr=True, eq=True, order=False,
 | |
|               unsafe_hash=False, frozen=False):
 | |
|     """Returns the same class as was passed in, with dunder methods
 | |
|     added based on the fields defined in the class.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Examines PEP 526 __annotations__ to determine fields.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If init is true, an __init__() method is added to the class. If
 | |
|     repr is true, a __repr__() method is added. If order is true, rich
 | |
|     comparison dunder methods are added. If unsafe_hash is true, a
 | |
|     __hash__() method function is added. If frozen is true, fields may
 | |
|     not be assigned to after instance creation.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def wrap(cls):
 | |
|         return _process_class(cls, init, repr, eq, order, unsafe_hash, frozen)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # See if we're being called as @dataclass or @dataclass().
 | |
|     if _cls is None:
 | |
|         # We're called with parens.
 | |
|         return wrap
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # We're called as @dataclass without parens.
 | |
|     return wrap(_cls)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def fields(class_or_instance):
 | |
|     """Return a tuple describing the fields of this dataclass.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Accepts a dataclass or an instance of one. Tuple elements are of
 | |
|     type Field.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Might it be worth caching this, per class?
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         fields = getattr(class_or_instance, _FIELDS)
 | |
|     except AttributeError:
 | |
|         raise TypeError('must be called with a dataclass type or instance')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Exclude pseudo-fields.  Note that fields is sorted by insertion
 | |
|     # order, so the order of the tuple is as the fields were defined.
 | |
|     return tuple(f for f in fields.values() if f._field_type is _FIELD)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _is_dataclass_instance(obj):
 | |
|     """Returns True if obj is an instance of a dataclass."""
 | |
|     return not isinstance(obj, type) and hasattr(obj, _FIELDS)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def is_dataclass(obj):
 | |
|     """Returns True if obj is a dataclass or an instance of a
 | |
|     dataclass."""
 | |
|     return hasattr(obj, _FIELDS)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def asdict(obj, *, dict_factory=dict):
 | |
|     """Return the fields of a dataclass instance as a new dictionary mapping
 | |
|     field names to field values.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Example usage:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       @dataclass
 | |
|       class C:
 | |
|           x: int
 | |
|           y: int
 | |
| 
 | |
|       c = C(1, 2)
 | |
|       assert asdict(c) == {'x': 1, 'y': 2}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If given, 'dict_factory' will be used instead of built-in dict.
 | |
|     The function applies recursively to field values that are
 | |
|     dataclass instances. This will also look into built-in containers:
 | |
|     tuples, lists, and dicts.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if not _is_dataclass_instance(obj):
 | |
|         raise TypeError("asdict() should be called on dataclass instances")
 | |
|     return _asdict_inner(obj, dict_factory)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _asdict_inner(obj, dict_factory):
 | |
|     if _is_dataclass_instance(obj):
 | |
|         result = []
 | |
|         for f in fields(obj):
 | |
|             value = _asdict_inner(getattr(obj, f.name), dict_factory)
 | |
|             result.append((f.name, value))
 | |
|         return dict_factory(result)
 | |
|     elif isinstance(obj, tuple) and hasattr(obj, '_fields'):
 | |
|         # obj is a namedtuple.  Recurse into it, but the returned
 | |
|         # object is another namedtuple of the same type.  This is
 | |
|         # similar to how other list- or tuple-derived classes are
 | |
|         # treated (see below), but we just need to create them
 | |
|         # differently because a namedtuple's __init__ needs to be
 | |
|         # called differently (see bpo-34363).
 | |
| 
 | |
|         # I'm not using namedtuple's _asdict()
 | |
|         # method, because:
 | |
|         # - it does not recurse in to the namedtuple fields and
 | |
|         #   convert them to dicts (using dict_factory).
 | |
|         # - I don't actually want to return a dict here.  The the main
 | |
|         #   use case here is json.dumps, and it handles converting
 | |
|         #   namedtuples to lists.  Admittedly we're losing some
 | |
|         #   information here when we produce a json list instead of a
 | |
|         #   dict.  Note that if we returned dicts here instead of
 | |
|         #   namedtuples, we could no longer call asdict() on a data
 | |
|         #   structure where a namedtuple was used as a dict key.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         return type(obj)(*[_asdict_inner(v, dict_factory) for v in obj])
 | |
|     elif isinstance(obj, (list, tuple)):
 | |
|         # Assume we can create an object of this type by passing in a
 | |
|         # generator (which is not true for namedtuples, handled
 | |
|         # above).
 | |
|         return type(obj)(_asdict_inner(v, dict_factory) for v in obj)
 | |
|     elif isinstance(obj, dict):
 | |
|         return type(obj)((_asdict_inner(k, dict_factory),
 | |
|                           _asdict_inner(v, dict_factory))
 | |
|                          for k, v in obj.items())
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         return copy.deepcopy(obj)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def astuple(obj, *, tuple_factory=tuple):
 | |
|     """Return the fields of a dataclass instance as a new tuple of field values.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Example usage::
 | |
| 
 | |
|       @dataclass
 | |
|       class C:
 | |
|           x: int
 | |
|           y: int
 | |
| 
 | |
|     c = C(1, 2)
 | |
|     assert astuple(c) == (1, 2)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If given, 'tuple_factory' will be used instead of built-in tuple.
 | |
|     The function applies recursively to field values that are
 | |
|     dataclass instances. This will also look into built-in containers:
 | |
|     tuples, lists, and dicts.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if not _is_dataclass_instance(obj):
 | |
|         raise TypeError("astuple() should be called on dataclass instances")
 | |
|     return _astuple_inner(obj, tuple_factory)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _astuple_inner(obj, tuple_factory):
 | |
|     if _is_dataclass_instance(obj):
 | |
|         result = []
 | |
|         for f in fields(obj):
 | |
|             value = _astuple_inner(getattr(obj, f.name), tuple_factory)
 | |
|             result.append(value)
 | |
|         return tuple_factory(result)
 | |
|     elif isinstance(obj, tuple) and hasattr(obj, '_fields'):
 | |
|         # obj is a namedtuple.  Recurse into it, but the returned
 | |
|         # object is another namedtuple of the same type.  This is
 | |
|         # similar to how other list- or tuple-derived classes are
 | |
|         # treated (see below), but we just need to create them
 | |
|         # differently because a namedtuple's __init__ needs to be
 | |
|         # called differently (see bpo-34363).
 | |
|         return type(obj)(*[_astuple_inner(v, tuple_factory) for v in obj])
 | |
|     elif isinstance(obj, (list, tuple)):
 | |
|         # Assume we can create an object of this type by passing in a
 | |
|         # generator (which is not true for namedtuples, handled
 | |
|         # above).
 | |
|         return type(obj)(_astuple_inner(v, tuple_factory) for v in obj)
 | |
|     elif isinstance(obj, dict):
 | |
|         return type(obj)((_astuple_inner(k, tuple_factory), _astuple_inner(v, tuple_factory))
 | |
|                           for k, v in obj.items())
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         return copy.deepcopy(obj)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def make_dataclass(cls_name, fields, *, bases=(), namespace=None, init=True,
 | |
|                    repr=True, eq=True, order=False, unsafe_hash=False,
 | |
|                    frozen=False):
 | |
|     """Return a new dynamically created dataclass.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The dataclass name will be 'cls_name'.  'fields' is an iterable
 | |
|     of either (name), (name, type) or (name, type, Field) objects. If type is
 | |
|     omitted, use the string 'typing.Any'.  Field objects are created by
 | |
|     the equivalent of calling 'field(name, type [, Field-info])'.
 | |
| 
 | |
|       C = make_dataclass('C', ['x', ('y', int), ('z', int, field(init=False))], bases=(Base,))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     is equivalent to:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       @dataclass
 | |
|       class C(Base):
 | |
|           x: 'typing.Any'
 | |
|           y: int
 | |
|           z: int = field(init=False)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     For the bases and namespace parameters, see the builtin type() function.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The parameters init, repr, eq, order, unsafe_hash, and frozen are passed to
 | |
|     dataclass().
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if namespace is None:
 | |
|         namespace = {}
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         # Copy namespace since we're going to mutate it.
 | |
|         namespace = namespace.copy()
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # While we're looking through the field names, validate that they
 | |
|     # are identifiers, are not keywords, and not duplicates.
 | |
|     seen = set()
 | |
|     anns = {}
 | |
|     for item in fields:
 | |
|         if isinstance(item, str):
 | |
|             name = item
 | |
|             tp = 'typing.Any'
 | |
|         elif len(item) == 2:
 | |
|             name, tp, = item
 | |
|         elif len(item) == 3:
 | |
|             name, tp, spec = item
 | |
|             namespace[name] = spec
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             raise TypeError(f'Invalid field: {item!r}')
 | |
| 
 | |
|         if not isinstance(name, str) or not name.isidentifier():
 | |
|             raise TypeError(f'Field names must be valid identifers: {name!r}')
 | |
|         if keyword.iskeyword(name):
 | |
|             raise TypeError(f'Field names must not be keywords: {name!r}')
 | |
|         if name in seen:
 | |
|             raise TypeError(f'Field name duplicated: {name!r}')
 | |
| 
 | |
|         seen.add(name)
 | |
|         anns[name] = tp
 | |
| 
 | |
|     namespace['__annotations__'] = anns
 | |
|     # We use `types.new_class()` instead of simply `type()` to allow dynamic creation
 | |
|     # of generic dataclassses.
 | |
|     cls = types.new_class(cls_name, bases, {}, lambda ns: ns.update(namespace))
 | |
|     return dataclass(cls, init=init, repr=repr, eq=eq, order=order,
 | |
|                      unsafe_hash=unsafe_hash, frozen=frozen)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def replace(obj, **changes):
 | |
|     """Return a new object replacing specified fields with new values.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This is especially useful for frozen classes.  Example usage:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       @dataclass(frozen=True)
 | |
|       class C:
 | |
|           x: int
 | |
|           y: int
 | |
| 
 | |
|       c = C(1, 2)
 | |
|       c1 = replace(c, x=3)
 | |
|       assert c1.x == 3 and c1.y == 2
 | |
|       """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # We're going to mutate 'changes', but that's okay because it's a
 | |
|     # new dict, even if called with 'replace(obj, **my_changes)'.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if not _is_dataclass_instance(obj):
 | |
|         raise TypeError("replace() should be called on dataclass instances")
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # It's an error to have init=False fields in 'changes'.
 | |
|     # If a field is not in 'changes', read its value from the provided obj.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     for f in getattr(obj, _FIELDS).values():
 | |
|         # Only consider normal fields or InitVars.
 | |
|         if f._field_type is _FIELD_CLASSVAR:
 | |
|             continue
 | |
| 
 | |
|         if not f.init:
 | |
|             # Error if this field is specified in changes.
 | |
|             if f.name in changes:
 | |
|                 raise ValueError(f'field {f.name} is declared with '
 | |
|                                  'init=False, it cannot be specified with '
 | |
|                                  'replace()')
 | |
|             continue
 | |
| 
 | |
|         if f.name not in changes:
 | |
|             if f._field_type is _FIELD_INITVAR:
 | |
|                 raise ValueError(f"InitVar {f.name!r} "
 | |
|                                  'must be specified with replace()')
 | |
|             changes[f.name] = getattr(obj, f.name)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Create the new object, which calls __init__() and
 | |
|     # __post_init__() (if defined), using all of the init fields we've
 | |
|     # added and/or left in 'changes'.  If there are values supplied in
 | |
|     # changes that aren't fields, this will correctly raise a
 | |
|     # TypeError.
 | |
|     return obj.__class__(**changes)
 | 
