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Mastering Object-oriented Python

Mastering Object-oriented Python

By : Steven F. Lott
4.2 (13)
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Mastering Object-oriented Python

Mastering Object-oriented Python

4.2 (13)
By: Steven F. Lott

Overview of this book

This practical example-oriented guide will teach you advanced concepts of object-oriented programming in Python. This book will present detailed examples of almost all of the special method names that support creating classes that integrate seamlessly with Python's built-in features. It will show you how to use JSON, YAML, Pickle, CSV, XML, Shelve, and SQL to create persistent objects and transmit objects between processes. The book also covers logging, warnings, unit testing, configuration files, and how to work with the command line. This book is broken into three major parts: Pythonic Classes via Special Methods; Persistence and Serialization; Testing, Debugging, Deploying, and Maintaining. The special methods are broken down into several focus areas: initialization, basics, attribute access, callables, contexts, containers, collections, numbers, and more advanced techniques such as decorators and mixin classes.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
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Mastering Object-oriented Python
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Some Preliminaries
1
Index

Using the warnings module


Object-oriented development often involves performing a significant refactoring of a class or module. It's difficult to get the API exactly right the very first time we write an application. Indeed, the design time required to get the API exactly right might get wasted: Python's flexibility permits us great latitude in making changes as we learn more about the problem domain and the user's requirements.

One of the tools that we can use to support the design evolution is the warnings module. There are two clear use cases for warnings and one fuzzy use case:

  • To alert developers of the API changes, usually features that are deprecated or pending deprecation. The deprecation and pending deprecation warnings are silent by default. These messages are not silent when running the unittest module; this helps us ensure that we're making proper use of upgraded library packages.

  • To alert the users about a configuration problem. For example, there might be several alternative implementations...

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Tech Concepts
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Programming languages
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Mastering Object-oriented Python
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