| """Miscellaneous utility functions.""" |
| |
| class ObjectDict(dict): |
| """Makes a dictionary behave like an object.""" |
| def __getattr__(self, name): |
| try: |
| return self[name] |
| except KeyError: |
| raise AttributeError(name) |
| |
| def __setattr__(self, name, value): |
| self[name] = value |
| |
| |
| def import_object(name): |
| """Imports an object by name. |
| |
| import_object('x.y.z') is equivalent to 'from x.y import z'. |
| |
| >>> import tornado.escape |
| >>> import_object('tornado.escape') is tornado.escape |
| True |
| >>> import_object('tornado.escape.utf8') is tornado.escape.utf8 |
| True |
| """ |
| parts = name.split('.') |
| obj = __import__('.'.join(parts[:-1]), None, None, [parts[-1]], 0) |
| return getattr(obj, parts[-1]) |
| |
| # Fake byte literal support: In python 2.6+, you can say b"foo" to get |
| # a byte literal (str in 2.x, bytes in 3.x). There's no way to do this |
| # in a way that supports 2.5, though, so we need a function wrapper |
| # to convert our string literals. b() should only be applied to literal |
| # latin1 strings. Once we drop support for 2.5, we can remove this function |
| # and just use byte literals. |
| if str is unicode: |
| def b(s): |
| return s.encode('latin1') |
| bytes_type = bytes |
| else: |
| def b(s): |
| return s |
| bytes_type = str |
| |
| def doctests(): |
| import doctest |
| return doctest.DocTestSuite() |