442 lines
14 KiB
ReStructuredText
442 lines
14 KiB
ReStructuredText
PEP: 468
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Title: Preserving the order of \*\*kwargs in a function.
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Eric Snow <ericsnowcurrently@gmail.com>
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Discussions-To: python-ideas@python.org
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Status: Final
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 05-Apr-2014
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Python-Version: 3.6
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Post-History: 05-Apr-2014, 08-Sep-2016
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Resolution: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2016-September/146329.html
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Abstract
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========
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The \*\*kwargs syntax in a function definition indicates that the
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interpreter should collect all keyword arguments that do not correspond
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to other named parameters. However, Python does not preserved the
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order in which those collected keyword arguments were passed to the
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function. In some contexts the order matters. This PEP dictates that
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the collected keyword arguments be exposed in the function body as an
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ordered mapping.
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Motivation
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==========
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Python's \*\*kwargs syntax in function definitions provides a powerful
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means of dynamically handling keyword arguments. In some applications
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of the syntax (see _`Use Cases`), the semantics applied to the
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collected keyword arguments requires that order be preserved.
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Unsurprisingly, this is similar to how OrderedDict is related to dict.
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Currently to preserved the order you have to do so manually and
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separately from the actual function call. This involves building an
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ordered mapping, whether an OrderedDict or an iterable of 2-tuples,
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which is then passed as a single argument to the function.
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[#arg_unpacking]_
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With the capability described in this PEP, that boilerplate would no
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longer be required.
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For comparison, currently::
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kwargs = OrderedDict()
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kwargs['eggs'] = ...
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...
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def spam(a, kwargs):
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...
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and with this proposal::
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def spam(a, **kwargs):
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...
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Alyssa (Nick) Coghlan, speaking of some of the uses cases, summed it up well
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[#alyssa_obvious]_::
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These *can* all be done today, but *not* by using keyword arguments.
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In my view, the problem to be addressed is that keyword arguments
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*look* like they should work for these cases, because they have a
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definite order in the source code. The only reason they don't work
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is because the interpreter throws that ordering information away.
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It's a textbook case of a language feature becoming an attractive
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nuisance in some circumstances: the simple and obvious solution for
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the above use cases *doesn't actually work* for reasons that aren't
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obviously clear if you don't have a firm grasp of Python's admittedly
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complicated argument handling.
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This observation is supported by the appearance of this proposal over
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the years and the numerous times that people have been confused by the
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constructor for OrderedDict. [#past_threads]_ [#loss_of_order]_
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[#compact_dict]_
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Use Cases
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=========
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As Alyssa noted, the current behavior of \*\*kwargs is unintuitive in
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cases where one would expect order to matter. Aside from more specific
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cases outlined below, in general "anything else where you want to
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control the iteration order *and* set field names and values in a single
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call will potentially benefit." [#alyssa_general]_ That matters in the
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case of factories (e.g. __init__()) for ordered types.
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Serialization
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-------------
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Obviously OrderedDict would benefit (both __init__() and update()) from
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ordered kwargs. However, the benefit also extends to serialization
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APIs [#alyssa_obvious]_::
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In the context of serialisation, one key lesson we have learned is
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that arbitrary ordering is a problem when you want to minimise
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spurious diffs, and sorting isn't a simple solution.
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Tools like doctest don't tolerate spurious diffs at all, but are
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often amenable to a sorting based answer.
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The cases where it would be highly desirable to be able use keyword
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arguments to control the order of display of a collection of key
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value pairs are ones like:
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* printing out key:value pairs in CLI output
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* mapping semantic names to column order in a CSV
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* serialising attributes and elements in particular orders in XML
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* serialising map keys in particular orders in human readable formats
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like JSON and YAML (particularly when they're going to be placed
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under source control)
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Debugging
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---------
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In the words of Raymond Hettinger [#raymond_debug]_::
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It makes it easier to debug if the arguments show-up in the order
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they were created. AFAICT, no purpose is served by scrambling them.
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Other Use Cases
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---------------
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* Mock objects. [#mock]_
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* Controlling object presentation.
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* Alternate namedtuple() where defaults can be specified.
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* Specifying argument priority by order.
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Concerns
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========
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Performance
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-----------
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As already noted, the idea of ordered keyword arguments has come up on
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a number of occasions. Each time it has been met with the same
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response, namely that preserving keyword arg order would have a
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sufficiently adverse effect on function call performance that it's not
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worth doing. However, Guido noted the following [#guido_open]_::
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Making **kwds ordered is still open, but requires careful design and
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implementation to avoid slowing down function calls that don't benefit.
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As will be noted below, there are ways to work around this at the
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expense of increased complication. Ultimately the simplest approach is
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the one that makes the most sense: pack collected key word arguments
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into an OrderedDict. However, without a C implementation of OrderedDict
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there isn't much to discuss. That changed in Python 3.5.
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[#c_ordereddict]_
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Note: in Python 3.6 dict is order-preserving. This virtually eliminates
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performance concerns.
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Other Python Implementations
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----------------------------
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Another important issue to consider is that new features must be
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cognizant of the multiple Python implementations. At some point each of
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them would be expected to have implemented ordered kwargs. In this
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regard there doesn't seem to be an issue with the idea. [#ironpython]_
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An informal survey of the major Python implementations has indicated
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that this feature will not be a significant burden.
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Specification
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=============
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Starting in version 3.6 Python will preserve the order of keyword
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arguments as passed to a function. To accomplish this the collected
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kwargs will now be an ordered mapping. Note that this does not necessarily
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mean OrderedDict. dict in CPython 3.6 is now ordered, similar to PyPy.
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This will apply only to functions for which the definition uses the
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\*\*kwargs syntax for collecting otherwise unspecified keyword
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arguments. Only the order of those keyword arguments will be
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preserved.
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Relationship to \*\*-unpacking syntax
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-------------------------------------
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The ** unpacking syntax in function calls has no special connection with
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this proposal. Keyword arguments provided by unpacking will be treated
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in exactly the same way as they are now: ones that match defined
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parameters are gather there and the remainder will be collected into the
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ordered kwargs (just like any other unmatched keyword argument).
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Note that unpacking a mapping with undefined order, such as dict, will
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preserve its iteration order like normal. It's just that the order will
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remain undefined. The ordered mapping into which the unpacked key-value
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pairs will then be packed will not be able to provide any alternate
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ordering. This should not be surprising.
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There have been brief discussions of simply passing these mappings
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through to the functions kwargs without unpacking and repacking them,
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but that is both outside the scope of this proposal and probably a bad
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idea regardless. (There is a reason those discussions were brief.)
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Relationship to inspect.Signature
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---------------------------------
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Signature objects should need no changes. The ``kwargs`` parameter of
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inspect.BoundArguments (returned by Signature.bind() and
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Signature.bind_partial()) will change from a dict to an OrderedDict.
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C-API
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-----
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No changes.
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Syntax
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------
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No syntax is added or changed by this proposal.
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Backward-Compatibility
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----------------------
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The following will change:
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* iteration order of kwargs will now be consistent (except of course in
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the case described above)
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Reference Implementation
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========================
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For CPython there's nothing to do.
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Alternate Approaches
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====================
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Opt-out Decorator
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-----------------
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This is identical to the current proposal with the exception that Python
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would also provide a decorator in functools that would cause collected
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keyword arguments to be packed into a normal dict instead of an
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OrderedDict.
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Prognosis:
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This would only be necessary if performance is determined to be
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significantly different in some uncommon cases or that there are other
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backward-compatibility concerns that cannot be resolved otherwise.
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Opt-in Decorator
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----------------
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The status quo would be unchanged. Instead Python would provide a
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decorator in functools that would register or mark the decorated
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function as one that should get ordered keyword arguments. The
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performance overhead to check the function at call time would be
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marginal.
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Prognosis:
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The only real down-side is in the case of function wrappers factories
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(e.g. functools.partial and many decorators) that aim to perfectly
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preserve keyword arguments by using kwargs in the wrapper definition
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and kwargs unpacking in the call to the wrapped function. Each wrapper
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would have to be updated separately, though having functools.wraps() do
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this automaticallywould help.
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__kworder__
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-----------
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The order of keyword arguments would be stored separately in a list at
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call time. The list would be bound to __kworder__ in the function
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locals.
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Prognosis:
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This likewise complicates the wrapper case.
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Compact dict with faster iteration
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----------------------------------
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Raymond Hettinger has introduced the idea of a dict implementation that
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would result in preserving insertion order on dicts (until the first
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deletion). This would be a perfect fit for kwargs. [#compact_dict]_
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Prognosis:
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The idea is still uncertain in both viability and timeframe.
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Note that Python 3.6 now has this dict implementation.
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\*\*\*kwargs
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------------
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This would add a new form to a function's signature as a mutually
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exclusive parallel to \*\*kwargs. The new syntax, \*\*\*kwargs (note
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that there are three asterisks), would indicate that kwargs should
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preserve the order of keyword arguments.
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Prognosis:
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New syntax is only added to Python under the most *dire* circumstances.
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With other available solutions, new syntax is not justifiable.
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Furthermore, like all opt-in solutions, the new syntax would complicate
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the pass-through case.
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annotations
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-----------
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This is a variation on the decorator approach. Instead of using a
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decorator to mark the function, you would use a function annotation on
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\*\*kwargs.
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Prognosis:
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In addition to the pass-through complication, annotations have been
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actively discouraged in Python core development. Use of annotations to
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opt-in to order preservation runs the risk of interfering with other
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application-level use of annotations.
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dict.__order__
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--------------
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dict objects would have a new attribute, ``__order__`` that would default
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to None and that in the kwargs case the interpreter would use in the
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same way as described above for __kworder__.
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Prognosis:
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It would mean zero impact on kwargs performance but the change would be
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pretty intrusive (Python uses dict a lot). Also, for the wrapper case
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the interpreter would have to be careful to preserve ``__order__``.
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KWArgsDict.__order__
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--------------------
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This is the same as the ``dict.__order__`` idea, but kwargs would be an
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instance of a new minimal dict subclass that provides the ``__order__``
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attribute. dict would instead be unchanged.
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Prognosis:
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Simply switching to OrderedDict is a less complicated and more intuitive
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change.
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Acknowledgements
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================
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Thanks to Andrew Barnert for helpful feedback and to the participants of
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all the past email threads.
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Footnotes
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=========
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.. [#arg_unpacking]
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Alternately, you could also replace ** in your function definition
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with * and then pass in key/value 2-tuples. This has the advantage
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of not requiring the keys to be valid identifier strings. See
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-April/027491.html.
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References
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==========
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.. [#alyssa_obvious]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-April/027512.html
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.. [#past_threads]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2009-April/004163.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2010-October/008445.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2011-January/009037.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2013-February/019690.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2013-May/020727.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2014-March/027225.html
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http://bugs.python.org/issue16276
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http://bugs.python.org/issue16553
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http://bugs.python.org/issue19026
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http://bugs.python.org/issue5397#msg82972
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.. [#loss_of_order]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2007-February/071310.html
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.. [#compact_dict]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2012-December/123028.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2012-December/123105.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2013-May/126327.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2013-May/126328.html
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.. [#alyssa_general]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2012-December/123105.html
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.. [#raymond_debug]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2013-May/126327.html
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.. [#mock]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2009-April/004163.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2009-April/004165.html
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2009-April/004175.html
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.. [#guido_open]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2013-May/126404.html
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.. [#c_ordereddict]
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http://bugs.python.org/issue16991
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.. [#ironpython]
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2012-December/123100.html
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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