Docs for IS_IN_SET.formatter
Description
<type 'instancemethod'>
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Attributes
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__call__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__call__(...) <==> x(...) |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__class__ |
<type 'type'> extends (<type 'object'>,)
belongs to class <type 'type'>
instancemethod(function, instance, class) Create an instance method object. |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__cmp__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__cmp__(y) <==> cmp(x,y) |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__delattr__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__delattr__('name') <==> del x.name |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__doc__ |
<type 'str'>
belongs to class <type 'str'>
str(object='') -> string Return a nice string representation of the object. If the argument is a string, the return value is the same object. |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__format__ |
<type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
belongs to class <type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
default object formatter |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__func__ |
<type 'function'>
belongs to class <type 'function'>
For some validators returns a formatted version (matching the validator) of value. Otherwise just returns the value. |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__get__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
descr.__get__(obj[, type]) -> value |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__getattribute__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__getattribute__('name') <==> x.name |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__hash__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__hash__() <==> hash(x) |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__init__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__init__(...) initializes x; see help(type(x)) for signature |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__new__ |
<type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
belongs to class <type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
T.__new__(S, ...) -> a new object with type S, a subtype of T |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__reduce__ |
<type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
belongs to class <type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
helper for pickle |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__reduce_ex__ |
<type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
belongs to class <type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
helper for pickle |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__repr__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__repr__() <==> repr(x) |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__self__ |
<type 'NoneType'>
belongs to class <type 'NoneType'>
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IS_IN_SET.formatter.__setattr__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__setattr__('name', value) <==> x.name = value |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__sizeof__ |
<type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
belongs to class <type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
__sizeof__() -> int size of object in memory, in bytes |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__str__ |
<type 'method-wrapper'>
belongs to class <type 'method-wrapper'>
x.__str__() <==> str(x) |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.__subclasshook__ |
<type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
belongs to class <type 'builtin_function_or_method'>
Abstract classes can override this to customize issubclass(). This is invoked early on by abc.ABCMeta.__subclasscheck__(). It should return True, False or NotImplemented. If it returns NotImplemented, the normal algorithm is used. Otherwise, it overrides the normal algorithm (and the outcome is cached). |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.im_class |
<type 'type'> extends (<class 'gluon.validators.Validator'>,)
belongs to class <type 'type'>
Example: Used as:: INPUT(_type='text', _name='name', requires=IS_IN_SET(['max', 'john'],zero='')) The argument of IS_IN_SET must be a list or set:: >>> IS_IN_SET(['max', 'john'])('max') ('max', None) >>> IS_IN_SET(['max', 'john'])('massimo') ('massimo', 'value not allowed') >>> IS_IN_SET(['max', 'john'], multiple=True)(('max', 'john')) (('max', 'john'), None) >>> IS_IN_SET(['max', 'john'], multiple=True)(('bill', 'john')) (('bill', 'john'), 'value not allowed') >>> IS_IN_SET(('id1','id2'), ['first label','second label'])('id1') # Traditional way ('id1', None) >>> IS_IN_SET({'id1':'first label', 'id2':'second label'})('id1') ('id1', None) >>> import itertools >>> IS_IN_SET(itertools.chain(['1','3','5'],['2','4','6']))('1') ('1', None) >>> IS_IN_SET([('id1','first label'), ('id2','second label')])('id1') # Redundant way ('id1', None) |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.im_func |
<type 'function'>
belongs to class <type 'function'>
For some validators returns a formatted version (matching the validator) of value. Otherwise just returns the value. |
IS_IN_SET.formatter.im_self |
<type 'NoneType'>
belongs to class <type 'NoneType'>
|