Metadata-Version: 1.1 Name: constants Version: 0.6.0 Summary: The simple way to deal with environment constants. Home-page: http://github.com/3kwa/constants Author: Eugene Van den Bulke Author-email: eugene.vandenbulke@gmail.com License: BSD Description: ========= constants ========= The problem? ============ Most applications use constants. Many constants take different values based on the environment the application is executed in. Think database credentials over development, testing, staging, production or stock market execution over development, testing, paper, production ... A solution ========== Shamelessly inspired by the app_constants_ gem, ``constants`` aims to solve that problem (and that problem only). .ini file --------- ``constants`` uses the .ini file format to specify the application constants values in each environment. DEFAULT values are available in every environment unless specifically overridden in a section. :: [DEFAULT] something = a_default_value all = 1 a_string = 0350 [a_section] something = a_section_value just_for_me = 5.0 flag = False minutes = 365 * 24 * 60 To find out more about ini files and sections, check the Python standard library configparser_ documention. The default file is ``constants.ini`` in the current working directory. but you can use any filename you want cf. Instantiation_. Environment ----------- Define the environment the application will run in. The default environment variable to store that value is __CONSTANTS__, but you can use any variable name you want cf. Instantiation_. Most platform have a way to do that, in bash: :: export __CONSTANTS__=a_section .. _Instantiation: Instantiation ------------- >>> import constants >>> consts = constants.Constants() On instantiation, constants looks for an environement variable named __CONSTANTS__ whose value is used to find out which section of the constants.ini file should be used. Constants' constructor takes two (2) optional parameters. ``variable`` let's you specify the name of the environment variable and ``filename`` the absolute path to the .ini file containing the constants definitions. >>> consts = Constants(variable='AN_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE', ... filename='constants.cfg') # doctest: +SKIP Values ------ To access the values, the instance can be used like a dictionary (getitem). >>> consts['something'] 'a_section_value' Values are cast into integer, float or boolean when pertinent. >>> consts['all'] 1 >>> consts.a_string '0350' >>> consts.flag False Expressions are evaluated. >>> consts.minutes 525600 Values can also be accessed using the . operator (getattr) >>> consts.all 1 .. _Warning: Warning ------- "We are responsible adults" yet, inspired by Matthew Wilson's suggestion_ to raise an exception when an attempt is made to *change a constant*, ``constants`` issues warnings_ ... >>> import warnings >>> with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warning: ... # reassigning the constant all ... consts.all = 2 >>> warning[0].message UserWarning('all changed to 2',) ... and *changes the constant* anyway. >>> consts.all 2 It does so with the dict like assignment as well. >>> with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warning: ... consts['something'] = 'a_new_value' >>> warning[0].message UserWarning('something changed to a_new_value',) >>> consts['something'] 'a_new_value' Logging ------- ``constants`` aims to be a good logging_ citizen, grafting a logger to the logging tree. All calls to the logger methods expose an extra logRecord key called ``method``. With the logging level set to INFO, it logs one and only one useful message. >>> import sys >>> import logging >>> logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO, ... stream=sys.stdout, ... format='%(levelname)s %(name)s.%(method)s %(message)s') >>> consts = constants.Constants() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE +ELLIPSIS INFO constants.load variable: __CONSTANTS__, filename: constants.ini, environment: a_section, constants: {...} At DEBUG level it becomes a tad *noisier*. >>> logging.root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) >>> debug_me = consts.just_for_me # doctest: +ELLIPSIS DEBUG constants.__getattr__ begin (..., 'just_for_me') {} DEBUG constants.__getitem__ begin (..., 'just_for_me') {} DEBUG constants.cast begin ('5.0',) {} DEBUG constants.cast end 5.0 DEBUG constants.__getitem__ end 5.0 DEBUG constants.__getattr__ end 5.0 Installation ============ ``constants`` is available on PyPI_ ... :: pip install constants ... and can be forked on GitHub_. .. _app_constants: https://github.com/leonardoborges/app_constants .. _configparser: http://docs.python.org/library/configparser.html .. _PyPI: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/constants .. _GitHub: https://github.com/3kwa/constants .. _suggestion: https://twitter.com/mw44118/status/256022281409658881 .. _warnings: http://docs.python.org/library/warnings.html .. _logging: http://docs.python.org/library/logging.html Platform: UNKNOWN Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.0 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3 Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries