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Library for managing subscriptions

Project description

Subscribe

A simple yet powerfull subscription library in Python for managing subscriptions.

Concepts

Every subscription consists of

  • subscription_list - a unique identification (just a string) for a list to which is subscribed
  • prio - a integer with the prio of the subscription which will be used to order the subscriptions (from low to high)
  • subscriber - The object which is subscribed. Can be anything. Often a function.

Quick start

Import subscribe

>>> import subscribe

Create a SubscriptionList

Make a subscription list

>>> new_user = subscribe.SubscriptionList("new_user")

Subscribe to the subscription_list

Add a first subscriber, ie a function.

>>> @new_user.subscribe()
... def send_mail(user):
...     pass

Get the subscriptions

Get the subscriptions, ie so you call the subscribed functions.

>>> [i for i in new_user.get_subscriptions()]
[Subscription(subscription_list=<SubscriptionList id='new_user'>, prio=0, subscriber=<function send_mail at ...>)]

Or just the subscribers, which is most of the time what you want

>>> [i.__name__ for i in new_user.get_subscribers()]
['send_mail']

You can also use the `subscribers` property.

>>> [i.__name__ for i in new_user.subscribers]
['send_mail']

Often the subscribers are callables. You can call them all with
same parameters.

>>> new_user.call_subscribers(user="marc")

Priority

You can subscribe multiple times to the same SubscriptionList.
The subscriptions will be sorted in order of prio. When no prio is given, the prio
will be equal to 0 and the subscriptions will be in order of addition.

>>> @new_user.subscribe(prio=-1)
... def compute_age(user):
...     pass

Get the subscribers.

>>> [i.__name__ for i in new_user.get_subscribers()]
['compute_age', 'send_mail']

You can subscribe anything, not just functions. It is up to you.  
Ie it can be a string.

>>> sentence = subscribe.SubscriptionList("sentence")

>>> word = sentence.subscribe()("Python")
>>> word = sentence.subscribe()("is")
>>> word = sentence.subscribe(prio=5)("language")
>>> word = sentence.subscribe(prio=2)("nice")
>>> word = sentence.subscribe(prio=1)("a")

And you can get the strings in the order of the prio.

>>> ' '.join(sentence.get_subscribers())
'Python is a nice language'

Advanced Usage

Class based SubscriptionList

An important use case is to subscribe to classes. Ie if
you have a class NewUserEvent

>>> class Event:
...     pass
>>> class NewUserEvent(Event):
...   pass

You can create a class subscription, which will convert the class into
a subscription list with the fully qualified name as id.

>>> new_user_event = subscribe.ClassSubscriptionList(NewUserEvent)
>>> new_user_event
<ClassSubscriptionList class='__main__.NewUserEvent'>

>>> @new_user_event.subscribe()
... def subscriber1():
...     pass
>>> @new_user_event.subscribe()
... def subscriber2():
...     pass
>>> list(new_user_event.get_subscribers()) == [subscriber1, subscriber2]
True

With an instance you can get the subscription list also.

>>> list(subscribe.ClassSubscriptionList(NewUserEvent()).subscribers) == [subscriber1, subscriber2]
True

A class can have superclasses for which subscription lists are
defined also.

>>> event = subscribe.ClassSubscriptionList(Event)
>>> @event.subscribe()
... def event_subscriber():
...     pass

You can iterate over all subscribers of
the class and all superclasses via `get_superclass_subscribers`

>>> list(subscribe.get_superclass_subscribers(NewUserEvent)) == [subscriber1, subscriber2, event_subscriber]
True

Of course you can use the instance also.

>>> list(subscribe.get_superclass_subscribers(NewUserEvent())) == [subscriber1, subscriber2, event_subscriber]
True

You can also call all subscribers directly.
>>> subscribe.call_superclass_subscribers(NewUserEvent())

Multiple instantiation

A subscription list can be created multiple times

>>> first = subscribe.SubscriptionList("my list")
>>> second = subscribe.SubscriptionList("my list")

Both can be used to subscribe.

>>> first.subscribe()("subscribe to first")
'subscribe to first'
>>> second.subscribe()("subscribe to second")
'subscribe to second'

Both will have the same subscriptions.

>>> [i.subscriber for i in first.get_subscriptions()]
['subscribe to first', 'subscribe to second']
>>> [i.subscriber for i in second.get_subscriptions()]
['subscribe to first', 'subscribe to second']

Subclass SubscriptionList

You can subclass SubscriptionList, like we did for ClassSubscriptionList.

For example, if you have users.

>>> class User:
...     def __init__(self, username):
...         self.username = username

Which could be used to subscribe to, like subscribing to Twitter accounts

>>> class UserSubscriptionList(subscribe.SubscriptionList):
...     def __init__(self, user: User):
...         super().__init__(f"user:{user.username}")

Note: the subscription list is in memory and not persistent. You can implement your own 
persistency for your SubscriptionList subclass when appropriate.

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