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Code Editor : newdict.py
""" A dict subclass for Python 2 that behaves like Python 3's dict Example use: >>> from builtins import dict >>> d1 = dict() # instead of {} for an empty dict >>> d2 = dict(key1='value1', key2='value2') The keys, values and items methods now return iterators on Python 2.x (with set-like behaviour on Python 2.7). >>> for d in (d1, d2): ... assert not isinstance(d.keys(), list) ... assert not isinstance(d.values(), list) ... assert not isinstance(d.items(), list) """ import sys from future.utils import with_metaclass from future.types.newobject import newobject _builtin_dict = dict ver = sys.version_info[:2] class BaseNewDict(type): def __instancecheck__(cls, instance): if cls == newdict: return isinstance(instance, _builtin_dict) else: return issubclass(instance.__class__, cls) class newdict(with_metaclass(BaseNewDict, _builtin_dict)): """ A backport of the Python 3 dict object to Py2 """ def items(self): """ On Python 2.7+: D.items() -> a set-like object providing a view on D's items On Python 2.6: D.items() -> an iterator over D's items """ if ver == (2, 7): return self.viewitems() elif ver == (2, 6): return self.iteritems() elif ver >= (3, 0): return self.items() def keys(self): """ On Python 2.7+: D.keys() -> a set-like object providing a view on D's keys On Python 2.6: D.keys() -> an iterator over D's keys """ if ver == (2, 7): return self.viewkeys() elif ver == (2, 6): return self.iterkeys() elif ver >= (3, 0): return self.keys() def values(self): """ On Python 2.7+: D.values() -> a set-like object providing a view on D's values On Python 2.6: D.values() -> an iterator over D's values """ if ver == (2, 7): return self.viewvalues() elif ver == (2, 6): return self.itervalues() elif ver >= (3, 0): return self.values() def __new__(cls, *args, **kwargs): """ dict() -> new empty dictionary dict(mapping) -> new dictionary initialized from a mapping object's (key, value) pairs dict(iterable) -> new dictionary initialized as if via: d = {} for k, v in iterable: d[k] = v dict(**kwargs) -> new dictionary initialized with the name=value pairs in the keyword argument list. For example: dict(one=1, two=2) """ if len(args) == 0: return super(newdict, cls).__new__(cls) elif type(args[0]) == newdict: value = args[0] else: value = args[0] return super(newdict, cls).__new__(cls, value) def __native__(self): """ Hook for the future.utils.native() function """ return dict(self) __all__ = ['newdict']
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