I have a dictionary (in a module) which contains values of various sensors. I would like a user to be able use to a function syntax to get the sensor values, both as a whole and individually. Currently I have a function for each value who's sole purpose is to look up the corresponding dict value and return. But I don't think this is an elegant way to solve the problem. Is there someway I could define a single function that responds to all of possible function calls?
Eg. My dict : sensor = {'sens1': 200, 'sens2': 300} etc my functions: def sens1(): return sensor['sens1'] same for sens2. There are two solutions I've thought about: Have a function that takes in the sensor's name as a string and responds accordingly. (which might be what I'll end up using) I could let the user directly access the dict, but I'm not sure if that is a good idea. My project requires that the user of my module should not have to know about Python's data structures to use the values my module returns. If there is some sort of non-functional dot-separated syntax that I could use, that would be good too. Thanks, Basu -- Embedded Architectures, Systems programming and outrageous ideas -- http://xcomputers.wordpress.com _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor