Possible Duplicate:
How can the built-in range function take a single argument or three?
The Python documentation for slice() lists the following method signatures:
slice(stop)
slice(start, stop[, step])
Here are a few examples of creating a slice object with different numbers of arguments:
>>> slice(8)
slice(None, 8, None)
>>> slice(4, 8)
slice(4, 8, None)
>>> slice(4, 8, 2)
slice(4, 8, 2)
Note that if you call slice() with a single argument, that argument is used as the stop attribute (second argument with the two or three argument signature).
Since function overloading does not exist in Python, the typical way to allow a variable number of arguments is to use None as a default value, for example one attempt to reproduce the above behavior would be the following:
class myslice(object):
def __init__(self, start, stop=None, step=None):
if stop is None and step is None:
# only one argument was provided, so use first argument as self.stop
self.start = None
self.stop = start
else:
self.start = start
self.stop = stop
self.step = step
def __repr__(self):
return 'myslice({}, {}, {})'.format(self.start, self.stop, self.step)
However this assumes that None is not a value that could be provided for stop, note the following difference in behavior between my implementation and slice():
>>> slice(1, None)
slice(1, None, None)
>>> myslice(1, None)
myslice(None, 1, None)
Is there some other value that I could use in place of None that would indicate that the parameter was definitely not provided? Alternatively, is there a different way to implement this behavior other than default argument values?
Edit: By the way, in CPython, slice() is implemented in C.
There are a few ways to deal with the default argument issue.
Noneis the most common, but whenNoneis actually a reasonable value to pass in, you can create asentinel:Here’s a related answer where there was some discussion about using
Ellipsisas the sentinel as...is also a singleton.An alternative way to do this would be to use
*argsand unpack: