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authorCoprDistGit <infra@openeuler.org>2023-04-11 18:25:18 +0000
committerCoprDistGit <infra@openeuler.org>2023-04-11 18:25:18 +0000
commitdb65f490e0e04a539ce181519050932a5df0d1ea (patch)
tree5af2a86ba1de039a9714c7e1082473670fe7854d /python-antidote.spec
parent750ed79979413f9d32ec759af588d86638e844a0 (diff)
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+%global _empty_manifest_terminate_build 0
+Name: python-antidote
+Version: 2.0.0
+Release: 1
+Summary: Dependency injection.
+License: MIT
+URL: https://github.com/Finistere/antidote
+Source0: https://mirrors.nju.edu.cn/pypi/web/packages/c1/53/5f44fe4d4df87866ae32957c1a80394cf82cf9e20918a2958c25988d0031/antidote-2.0.0.tar.gz
+BuildArch: noarch
+
+Requires: python3-typing-extensions
+
+%description
+Antidote works with a :code:`Catalog` which is a sort of collection of dependencies. Multiple ones can co-exist, but :code:`world` is used by default. The most common form of a dependency is an instance of a given class
+ from antidote import injectable
+ @injectable
+ class Service:
+ pass
+ world[Service] # retrieve the instance
+ world.get(Service, default='something') # similar to a dict
+By default, :code:`@injectable` defines a singleton but alternative lifetimes (how long the :code:`world` keeps value alive in its cache) exists such as :code:`transient` where nothing is cached at all. Dependencies can also be injected into a function/method with :code:`@inject`. With both, Mypy, Pyright and PyCharm will infer the correct types.
+ from antidote import inject
+ @inject # ⯆ Infers the dependency from the type hint
+ def f(service: Service = inject.me()) -> Service:
+ return service
+ f() # service injected
+ f(Service()) # useful for testing: no injection, argument is used
+ from antidote import InjectMe
+ # recommended with inject.me() for best static-typing experience
+ @inject
+ def f2(service = inject[Service]):
+ @inject(kwargs={'service': Service})
+ def f3(service):
+ @inject
+ def f4(service: InjectMe[Service]):
+Classes can also be fully wired, all methods injected, easily with :code:`@wire`. It is also possible to
+inject the first argument, commonly named :code:`self`, of a method with an instance of a class:
+ @injectable
+ class Dummy:
+ @inject.method
+ def method(self) -> 'Dummy':
+ return self
+ # behaves like a class method
+ assert Dummy.method() is world[Dummy]
+ # useful for testing: when accessed trough an instance, no injection
+ dummy = Dummy()
+ assert dummy.method() is dummy
+
+%package -n python3-antidote
+Summary: Dependency injection.
+Provides: python-antidote
+BuildRequires: python3-devel
+BuildRequires: python3-setuptools
+BuildRequires: python3-pip
+%description -n python3-antidote
+Antidote works with a :code:`Catalog` which is a sort of collection of dependencies. Multiple ones can co-exist, but :code:`world` is used by default. The most common form of a dependency is an instance of a given class
+ from antidote import injectable
+ @injectable
+ class Service:
+ pass
+ world[Service] # retrieve the instance
+ world.get(Service, default='something') # similar to a dict
+By default, :code:`@injectable` defines a singleton but alternative lifetimes (how long the :code:`world` keeps value alive in its cache) exists such as :code:`transient` where nothing is cached at all. Dependencies can also be injected into a function/method with :code:`@inject`. With both, Mypy, Pyright and PyCharm will infer the correct types.
+ from antidote import inject
+ @inject # ⯆ Infers the dependency from the type hint
+ def f(service: Service = inject.me()) -> Service:
+ return service
+ f() # service injected
+ f(Service()) # useful for testing: no injection, argument is used
+ from antidote import InjectMe
+ # recommended with inject.me() for best static-typing experience
+ @inject
+ def f2(service = inject[Service]):
+ @inject(kwargs={'service': Service})
+ def f3(service):
+ @inject
+ def f4(service: InjectMe[Service]):
+Classes can also be fully wired, all methods injected, easily with :code:`@wire`. It is also possible to
+inject the first argument, commonly named :code:`self`, of a method with an instance of a class:
+ @injectable
+ class Dummy:
+ @inject.method
+ def method(self) -> 'Dummy':
+ return self
+ # behaves like a class method
+ assert Dummy.method() is world[Dummy]
+ # useful for testing: when accessed trough an instance, no injection
+ dummy = Dummy()
+ assert dummy.method() is dummy
+
+%package help
+Summary: Development documents and examples for antidote
+Provides: python3-antidote-doc
+%description help
+Antidote works with a :code:`Catalog` which is a sort of collection of dependencies. Multiple ones can co-exist, but :code:`world` is used by default. The most common form of a dependency is an instance of a given class
+ from antidote import injectable
+ @injectable
+ class Service:
+ pass
+ world[Service] # retrieve the instance
+ world.get(Service, default='something') # similar to a dict
+By default, :code:`@injectable` defines a singleton but alternative lifetimes (how long the :code:`world` keeps value alive in its cache) exists such as :code:`transient` where nothing is cached at all. Dependencies can also be injected into a function/method with :code:`@inject`. With both, Mypy, Pyright and PyCharm will infer the correct types.
+ from antidote import inject
+ @inject # ⯆ Infers the dependency from the type hint
+ def f(service: Service = inject.me()) -> Service:
+ return service
+ f() # service injected
+ f(Service()) # useful for testing: no injection, argument is used
+ from antidote import InjectMe
+ # recommended with inject.me() for best static-typing experience
+ @inject
+ def f2(service = inject[Service]):
+ @inject(kwargs={'service': Service})
+ def f3(service):
+ @inject
+ def f4(service: InjectMe[Service]):
+Classes can also be fully wired, all methods injected, easily with :code:`@wire`. It is also possible to
+inject the first argument, commonly named :code:`self`, of a method with an instance of a class:
+ @injectable
+ class Dummy:
+ @inject.method
+ def method(self) -> 'Dummy':
+ return self
+ # behaves like a class method
+ assert Dummy.method() is world[Dummy]
+ # useful for testing: when accessed trough an instance, no injection
+ dummy = Dummy()
+ assert dummy.method() is dummy
+
+%prep
+%autosetup -n antidote-2.0.0
+
+%build
+%py3_build
+
+%install
+%py3_install
+install -d -m755 %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}
+if [ -d doc ]; then cp -arf doc %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+if [ -d docs ]; then cp -arf docs %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+if [ -d example ]; then cp -arf example %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+if [ -d examples ]; then cp -arf examples %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+pushd %{buildroot}
+if [ -d usr/lib ]; then
+ find usr/lib -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+if [ -d usr/lib64 ]; then
+ find usr/lib64 -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+if [ -d usr/bin ]; then
+ find usr/bin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+if [ -d usr/sbin ]; then
+ find usr/sbin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+touch doclist.lst
+if [ -d usr/share/man ]; then
+ find usr/share/man -type f -printf "/%h/%f.gz\n" >> doclist.lst
+fi
+popd
+mv %{buildroot}/filelist.lst .
+mv %{buildroot}/doclist.lst .
+
+%files -n python3-antidote -f filelist.lst
+%dir %{python3_sitelib}/*
+
+%files help -f doclist.lst
+%{_docdir}/*
+
+%changelog
+* Tue Apr 11 2023 Python_Bot <Python_Bot@openeuler.org> - 2.0.0-1
+- Package Spec generated