**kwargs
Matt Gushee
mgushee at havenrock.com
Tue Jan 18 19:49:24 EST 2000
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Tue Jan 18 19:49:24 EST 2000
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sp00fD <sp00fD at yahoo.com> writes: > Does **kwargs represent a dictionary? If so, can I have a method like > such > > def foo(self, foo=None, bar=None, **kwargs) > > and then do something like > > this_dict = {} > ..insert stuff into this_dict.. > > my.foo(foo="something", bar="something else", this_dict) Ah, well, you've *sort of* got the right idea here. > ? How would I do something like this ? No need to. **kwargs is magic! You can do this: my.foo(foo="something", bar="something else", food="spam", thug="Dinsdale") ... and the keyword arguments 'food' and 'thug' are automatically folded into a dictionary, so that *within* the my.foo() method: kwargs['food'] => 'spam' kwargs['thug'] => 'Dinsdale' kwargs => {'food': 'spam', 'thug': 'Dinsdale'} Note that the name 'kwargs' has no meaning for the Python interpreter -- it's just a convention. The double asterisk is what works the magic. -- Matt Gushee Portland, Maine, USA mgushee at havenrock.com http://www.havenrock.com/
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