Python: Behavior of object in set operations
- by Josh Arenberg
I'm trying to create a custom object that behaves properly in set operations.
I've generally got it working, but I want to make sure I fully understand the implications. In particular, I'm interested in the behavior when there is additional data in the object that is not included in the equal / hash methods. It seems that in the 'intersection' operation, it returns the set of objects that are being compared to, where the 'union' operations returns the set of objects that are being compared.
To illustrate:
class MyObject:
def __init__(self,value,meta):
self.value = value
self.meta = meta
def __eq__(self,other):
if self.value == other.value:
return True
else:
return False
def __hash__(self):
return hash(self.value)
a = MyObject('1','left')
b = MyObject('1','right')
c = MyObject('2','left')
d = MyObject('2','right')
e = MyObject('3','left')
print a == b # True
print a == c # False
for i in set([a,c,e]).intersection(set([b,d])):
print "%s %s" % (i.value,i.meta)
#returns:
#1 right
#2 right
for i in set([a,c,e]).union(set([b,d])):
print "%s %s" % (i.value,i.meta)
#returns:
#1 left
#3 left
#2 left
Is this behavior documented somewhere and deterministic? If so, what is the governing principle?