Python .get() does not evaluate to True even though there is an object?

StackOverflow https://stackoverflow.com/questions/9327782

  •  30-04-2021
  •  | 
  •  

Вопрос

I am running a Pylons project and ran into this strange problem. When submitting a form i have an option to add a logo (simple .png). The logo is passed in a FieldStorage instance. I try to evaluate if the logo was sent with this:

if request.params.get('logo'):
    do x

However, that always evaluates to False, even when there is logo. If I print request.params I get UnicodeMultiDict([('logo', FieldStorage('logo', u'tux.png'))]).

I solved it with:

if not request.params.get('logo') == None:
    do x

I fail to see why that works and the first example does not.

Это было полезно?

Решение

This is interesting, somehow the FieldStorage object resolves to false.

It is perfectly legal to write the following (a bit easier):

if request.params.get('logo') is not None:
    # do x

Другие советы

With request.params.get('logo') you're getting a FieldStorage object, which probably evaluates to False, no matter what.

Anyway, you're just testing for existance of the 'logo' key in the dictionary. Why don't you use dictionary semantics for that? Haven't checked, but I guess it supports something like:

if 'logo' in request.params:
    do x

Edit: had a look to the code. UnicodeMultiDict is a subclass from UserDict.DictMixin, so it implements __contains__ and supports what I suggested.

Лицензировано под: CC-BY-SA с атрибуция
Не связан с StackOverflow
scroll top