nkozlovskiy e0e3e1717e add ydb deps | 1 year ago | |
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.dist-info | 1 year ago | |
tests | 1 year ago | |
traitlets | 1 year ago | |
COPYING.md | 1 year ago | |
README.md | 1 year ago | |
ya.make | 1 year ago |
Traitlets is a pure Python library enabling:
Its implementation relies on the descriptor pattern.
Traitlets powers the configuration system of IPython and Jupyter and the declarative API of IPython interactive widgets.
For a local installation, make sure you have pip installed and run:
pip install traitlets
For a development installation, clone this repository, change into the
traitlets
root directory, and run pip:
git clone https://github.com/ipython/traitlets.git
cd traitlets
pip install -e .
pip install "traitlets[test]"
py.test traitlets
Any class with trait attributes must inherit from HasTraits
.
For the list of available trait types and their properties, see the
Trait Types
section of the documentation.
To calculate a default value dynamically, decorate a method of your class with
@default({traitname})
. This method will be called on the instance, and
should return the default value. In this example, the _username_default
method is decorated with @default('username')
:
import getpass
from traitlets import HasTraits, Unicode, default
class Identity(HasTraits):
username = Unicode()
@default('username')
def _username_default(self):
return getpass.getuser()
When a trait changes, an application can follow this trait change with additional actions.
To do something when a trait attribute is changed, decorate a method with
traitlets.observe()
.
The method will be called with a single argument, a dictionary which contains
an owner, new value, old value, name of the changed trait, and the event type.
In this example, the _num_changed
method is decorated with @observe(`num`)
:
from traitlets import HasTraits, Integer, observe
class TraitletsExample(HasTraits):
num = Integer(5, help="a number").tag(config=True)
@observe('num')
def _num_changed(self, change):
print("{name} changed from {old} to {new}".format(**change))
and is passed the following dictionary when called:
{
'owner': object, # The HasTraits instance
'new': 6, # The new value
'old': 5, # The old value
'name': "foo", # The name of the changed trait
'type': 'change', # The event type of the notification, usually 'change'
}
Each trait type (Int
, Unicode
, Dict
etc.) may have its own validation or
coercion logic. In addition, we can register custom cross-validators
that may depend on the state of other attributes. For example:
from traitlets import HasTraits, TraitError, Int, Bool, validate
class Parity(HasTraits):
value = Int()
parity = Int()
@validate('value')
def _valid_value(self, proposal):
if proposal['value'] % 2 != self.parity:
raise TraitError('value and parity should be consistent')
return proposal['value']
@validate('parity')
def _valid_parity(self, proposal):
parity = proposal['value']
if parity not in [0, 1]:
raise TraitError('parity should be 0 or 1')
if self.value % 2 != parity:
raise TraitError('value and parity should be consistent')
return proposal['value']
parity_check = Parity(value=2)
# Changing required parity and value together while holding cross validation
with parity_check.hold_trait_notifications():
parity_check.value = 1
parity_check.parity = 1
However, we recommend that custom cross-validators don't modify the state of the HasTraits instance.