I am looking for an appropriate data structure in Python for processing variably structured forms. By variably structured forms I mean that the number of form fields and the types of the form’s contents are not known in advance. They are defined by the user who populates the forms with his input.
What are the pros and cons of putting data in A) object attributes (e.g. of an otherwise empty “form”-class) or B) simply lists/dicts? Consider that I have to preserve the sequence of form fields, the form field names and the types.
(Strangely, it has been difficult to find conclusive information on this topic. As I am still new to Python, it’s possible that I have searched for the wrong terms. If my question is not clear enough, please ask in the comments and I will try to clarify.)
Python classes are literally just two dicts (one for functions, one for data), a name and the rules how Python looks for keys. When you access existing keys, there is absolutely no difference to a dict (unless you overwrote the access rules of cause).
That means that there is no drawback (besides more code) to using classes at all and you should never be afraid to write a class.
In your particular case I think you should go with classes, for one simple reason: You might want to extend them later. Maybe you want to add constraints on the name (length, allowed letters, uniqueness, …) or the value (not empty, length, type, …) of a field one day. Maybe you want to validate all fields in a form. If you use a class you can do this without changing any code outside the class! And as I said before, even if you don’t, there are no drawbacks!
I guess my rule of thumb for classes is: Don’t use a class if you’re absolutely sure that there is nothing to add to it. If not just write those few extra lines.