checking 'type' programmatically

Billy Earney billy.earney at gmail.com
Fri Nov 20 10:06:09 EST 2009


Try looking at the function 'isinstance', so for example

if isinstance(obj, str):
	print "object is a string.."
elif isinstance(obj, int):
	print "object is an integer.." 

-----Original Message-----
From: python-list-bounces+billy.earney=gmail.com at python.org
[mailto:python-list-bounces+billy.earney=gmail.com at python.org] On Behalf Of
mk
Sent: Friday, November 20, 2009 4:10 AM
To: python-list at python.org
Subject: checking 'type' programmatically


Disclaimer: this is for exploring and debugging only. Really.

I can check type or __class__ in the interactive interpreter:

Python 2.6.2 (r262:71600, Jun 16 2009, 16:49:04)
[GCC 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-44)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
 >>> import subprocess
 >>> 
p=subprocess.Popen(['/bin/ls'],stdout=subprocess.PIPE,stderr=subprocess.PIPE
)
 >>> p
<subprocess.Popen object at 0xb7f2010c>
 >>> (so, se) = p.communicate()
 >>> so
'abc.txt\nbak\nbox\nbuild\ndead.letter\nDesktop\nhrs\nmbox\nmmultbench\nmmul
tbench.c\npyinstaller\nscreenlog.0\nshutdown\ntaddm_import.log\nv2\nvm\nwork
space\n'
 >>> se
''
 >>> so.__class__
<type 'str'>
 >>> type(so)
<type 'str'>
 >>> type(se)
<type 'str'>

But when I do smth like this in code that is ran non-interactively (as 
normal program):

req.write('stderr type %s<br>' % type(se))
req.write('stderr class %s<br>' % str(se.__class__))

then I get empty output. WTF?

How do I get the type or __class__ into some object that I can display?


Why do that: e.g. if documentation is incomplete, e.g. documentation on 
Popen.communicate() says "communicate() returns a tuple (stdoutdata, 
stderrdata)" but doesn't say what is the class of stdoutdata and 
stderrdata (a file object to read? a string?).

Regards,
mk



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