Reputation: 383
I have two methods which take different number of arguments. Here are the two functions:
def jumpMX(self,IAS,list):
pass
def addMX(self,IAS):
pass
I am using a function which will return one of these functions to main.I have stored this returned function in a variable named operation. Since the number of parameters are different for both,how do I identify which function has been returned?
if(operation == jumpMX):
operation(IAS,list)
elif(operation == addMX):
operation(IAS)
What is the syntax for this?Thanks in advance!
Upvotes: 0
Views: 454
Reputation: 2660
You can identify a function through its __name__
attribute:
def foo():
pass
print(foo.__name__)
>>> foo
...or in your case:
operation.__name__ #will return either "jumpMX" or "addMX" depending on what function is stored in operation
Here's a demo you can modify to your needs:
import random #used only for demo purposes
def jumpMX(self,IAS,list):
pass
def addMX(self,IAS):
pass
def FunctionThatWillReturnOneOrTheOtherOfTheTwoFunctionsAbove():
# This will randomly return either jumpMX()
# or addMX to simulate different scenarios
funcs = [jumpMX, addMX]
randomFunc = random.choice(funcs)
return randomFunc
operation = FunctionThatWillReturnOneOrTheOtherOfTheTwoFunctionsAbove()
name = operation.__name__
if(name == "jumpMX"):
operation(IAS,list)
elif(name == "addMX"):
operation(IAS)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 477
You can import those functions and test for equality like with most objects in python.
classes.py
class MyClass:
@staticmethod
def jump(self, ias, _list):
pass
@staticmethod
def add(self, ias):
pass
main.py
from classes import MyClass
myclass_instance = MyClass()
operation = get_op() # your function that returns MyClass.jump or MyClass.add
if operation == MyClass.jump:
operation(myclass_instance, ias, _list)
elif operation == MyClass.add:
operation(myclass_instance, ias)
However, I must emphasize that I don't know what you're trying to accomplish and this seems like a terribly contrived way of doing something like this.
Also, your python code examples are not properly formatted. See the PEP-8 which proposes a standard style-guide for python.
Upvotes: 0