I want to create a dynamic object (inside another object) in Python and then add attributes to it.
I tried:
obj = someobject
obj.a = object()
setattr(obj.a, 'somefield', 'somevalue')
but this didn't work.
Any ideas?
edit:
I am setting the attributes from a for
loop which loops through a list of values, e.g.
params = ['attr1', 'attr2', 'attr3']
obj = someobject
obj.a = object()
for p in params:
obj.a.p # where p comes from for loop variable
In the above example I would get obj.a.attr1
, obj.a.attr2
, obj.a.attr3
.
I used the setattr
function because I didn't know how to do obj.a.NAME
from a for
loop.
How would I set the attribute based on the value of p
in the example above?
The built-in object
can be instantiated but can't have any attributes set on it. (I wish it could, for this exact purpose.) It doesn't have a __dict__
to hold the attributes.
I generally just do this:
class Object(object):
pass
a = Object()
a.somefield = somevalue
When I can, I give the Object
class a more meaningful name, depending on what kind of data I'm putting in it.
Some people do a different thing, where they use a sub-class of dict
that allows attribute access to get at the keys. (d.key
instead of d['key']
)
Edit: For the addition to your question, using setattr
is fine. You just can't use setattr
on object()
instances.
params = ['attr1', 'attr2', 'attr3']
for p in params:
setattr(obj.a, p, value)