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Observable managed attributes (aka, observable properties)

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Observable managed attributes (also known as "observable properties")

In summary:

  • Declare observable properties using the @observable decorator instead of @property.
  • Subscribe/unsubscribe any number of callback functions to observable properties.
  • If the value of an observable property changes, all subscribed callbacks are executed.

How to use

Declare observable properties in your class

Use the @observable decorator as you do with @property:

from observable_properties import observable
class Test():
    def __init__(self):
        self._value = 0
    @observable
    def value(self):
        return self._value
    @value.setter
    def value(self, value):
        self._value = value

Needless to say, observable properties are also regular properties and they work just the same:

t = Test()
t.value = 1000
print(f"Current value of t: {t.value}")

Subscribe to property changes

In the context of this library, an observer is a callback function to be executed when the value of a property is overwritten in a given object. For example:

def observer(instance,property_name,new_value):
    print(f"{instance.__class__.__name__}.{property_name} = {new_value}")

To start observing a property, call subscribe() passing the instance and property name to observe along with the callback function:

from observable_properties import subscribe

subscribe(observer,t,"value")

Which means "subscribe observer to t.value". Now, the observer is executed after the value of the observed property changes at the observed object:

t.value = 2000

prints:

Test.value = 2000

Additionally:

  • Observers are not allowed to change the value of the observed property. ObservablePropertyError is raised in such a case.
  • The same observer can subscribe to many objects and properties.
  • Any number of observers can subscribe to the same object and property. All of them will run. The execution order depends on subscription order.

Unsubscribe

To stop observing a property, call unsubscribe() with the same parameters that were given to subscribe():

from observable_properties import unsubscribe

unsubscribe(observer,t,"value")

Syntactic sugar

To speed things up, derive your class from the Observable class (note the capital letter). The declaration itself does not differ too much from the previous example:

from observable_properties import Observable
class ObservableTest(Observable):
    def __init__(self):
        self._value = 0
    @observable
    def value(self):
        return self._value
    @value.setter
    def value(self, value):
        self._value = value

Observable classes offer subscribe() and unsubscribe() methods with a slightly different syntax to their function counterparts:

ot = ObservableTest()
ot.subscribe("value",observer)
ot.value = 900
ot.unsubscribe("value", observer)
ot.value = 500

prints:

ObservableTest.value = 900

Observable changes triggered from non-setter methods

A public setter is not mandatory for observable properties of an Observable instance. This is a common use case for computed properties.

Any method can notify changes in observable properties in two ways:

  • Compute the new value inside the context returned by self._observable(). The new value is automatically notified to all subscribers on exit. As an example, see Product.set() below.
  • Explicitly call self._observable_notify() after the computation is finished. As an example, see Product.set_alternate() below.
class Product(Observable):
    def __init__(self):
        self._a = 0
        self._b = 0
    @observable
    def value(self):
        return self._a * self._b
    def set(self, a, b):
        with self._observable("value"):
            self._a = a
            self._b = b
    def set_alternate(self, a, b):
        changed = (a!=self._a) or (b!=self._b)
        self._a = a
        self._b = b
        if (changed):
            self._observable_notify("value")
mult = Product()
mult.subscribe("value", observer)
mult.set(3, 5)
mult.set_alternate(4,3)

prints:

Product.value = 15
Product.value = 12

Other notes

  • subscribe(), unsubscribe(), _observable() and _observable_notify() raise ObservablePropertyError on non-observable or non-existing properties.
  • Subscribing twice to the same object and property has no effect.
  • Unsubscribing to non-subscribed properties has no effect, but unsubscribe() returns False.
  • Objects hold strong references to observers. Deleting an observer does not prevent it from running. Unsubscribe first.
  • Coroutines are accepted as observers. They are executed by the means of asyncio.run()

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