Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: utils
Version: 1.0.0
Summary: A grab-bag of utility functions and objects
Home-page: http://github.com/haaksmash/pyutils
Author: Haak Saxberg
Author-email: haak.erling@gmail.com
License: UNKNOWN
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: GNU Lesser General Public License v3 or later (LGPLv3+)
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries
Requires-Python: >=3.6

Utils
=====

.. image:: https://travis-ci.org/haaksmash/pyutils.svg?branch=master
    :target: https://travis-ci.org/haaksmash/pyutils

Sometimes you write a function over and over again; sometimes you look up at
the ceiling and ask "why, Guido, why isn't this included in the standard
library?"

Well, we perhaps can't answer that question. But we can collect those functions
into a centralized place!

Provided things
+++++++++++++++

Utils is broken up into broad swathes of functionality, to ease the task of
remembering where exactly something lives.

enum
----

Python doesn't have a built-in way to define an enum, so this module provides (what I think) is a pretty clean way to go about them.

.. code-block:: python

    from utils import enum

    class Colors(enum.Enum):
        RED = 0
        GREEN = 1

        # Defining an Enum class allows you to specify a few
        # things about the way it's going to behave.
        class Options:
            frozen = True # can't change attributes
            strict = True # can only compare to itself; i.e., Colors.RED == Animals.COW
                          # will raise an exception.

    # or use the enum factory (no Options, though)
    ColorsAlso = enum.enum("RED", "GREEN")

Once defined, use is straightforward:

.. code-block:: python

    >>> Colors
    <class 'blahblah.Colors'>
    >>> Colors.RED
    <EnumItem: RED [0]>
    >>> Colors.RED == 0
    True
    >>> Colors.RED == Colors.RED
    True
    >>> Colors.RED = 2
    Traceback (most recent call last):
      File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
      File "utils/enum.py", line 114, in __setattr__
        raise TypeError("can't set attributes on a frozen enum")
    TypeError: can't set attributes on a frozen enum

math
----

Currently only has the multiplicative analogue of the built-in ``sum``.

dicts
-----

intersections, differences, winnowing, a few specialized dicts...

lists
-----

flatten and unlisting. also ``flat_map``!

bools
-----

currently only provides an ``xor`` function.

dates
-----

Mostly cool for the ``TimePeriod`` classes:

.. code-block:: python

    >>> from datetime import date # will also work with datetimes
    >>> time_period = TimePeriod(date(2013, 5, 10), date(2013, 8, 11))
    >>> time_period
    <TimePeriod: 2013-05-10 00:00:00-2013-08-11 23:59:59>
    >>> date(2013, 6, 12) in time_period
    True
    >>> other_time_period = TimePeriod(date(2013, 6, 1), date(2013, 6, 30))
    >>> other_time_period in time_period
    True
    >>> another_time_period = TimePeriod(date(2013, 8, 1), date(2013, 8, 30))
    >>> time_period.overlaps(another_time_period)
    True
    >>> TimePeriod.get_containing_period(time_period, another_time_period)
    <TimePeriod: 2013-05-08 00:00:00-2013-08-30 23:59:59>


and so on and so forth. There's also a ``DiscontinousTimePeriod`` class, which
stores a collection of TimePeriods.

There's also helper functions for common operations like ``days_ahead`` and
``days_ago``, which pretty much do what they say on the tin.

objects
-------

provides ``get_attr``, which is really just a convenient way to do deep ``getattr`` chaining:

.. code-block:: python

    >>> get_attr(complicated, 'this.is.a.deep.string', default=None)
    "the deep string"  # or None, if anything in the lookup chain didn't exist

There's also an ``immutable`` utility, which will wrap an object and preven all attribute changes,
recursively by default. Any attempt to set attributes on the wrapped object will raise an ``AttributeError``:

.. code-block:: python

    >>> imm = immutable(something)
    >>> imm
    <Immutable Something: <Something>>
    >>> imm.red
    <Immutable SomethingElse: <SomethingElse: red>>
    >>> imm.red = SomethingElse('blue')
    # ...
    AttributeError: This object has been marked as immutable; you cannot set its attributes.
    >>> something.red = SomethingElse('blue')
    >>> imm.red
    <Immutable SomethingElse: <SomethingElse: blue>>

You can toggle the recursive immutability by specifying the 'recursive' flag.

Installation (via pip)
++++++++++++++++++++++

    pip install utils



