Name¶
-
class
lsst.verify.
Name
(package=None, metric=None, spec=None)[source]¶ Bases:
object
Semantic name of a package,
Metric
orSpecification
in thelsst.verify
framework.Name
instances are immutable and can be used as keys in mappings.Parameters: Name of the package, either as a string (
'validate_drp'
, for example) or as aName
object (Name(package='validate_drp')
for example).The
package
field can also be fully specified:>>> Name(package='validate_drp.PA1.design_gri') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design_gri')
Or the
package
field can be used as the sole positional argument:>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1.design_gri') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design_gri')
Name of the metric. The name can be relative (
'PA'
) or fully-specified ('validate_drp.PA1'
).Name of the specification. The name can be bare (
'design_gri'
), metric-relative ('PA1.design_gri'
) or fully-specified ('validate_drp.PA1.design_gri'
)Raises: TypeError
Raised when arguments cannot be parsed or conflict (for example, if two different package names are specified through two different fields).
Notes
Names in the Verification Framework are formatted as:
package.metric.specification
A fully-qualified name is one that has all components included. For example, a fully specified metric name is:
validate_drp.PA1
This means: “the
PA1
metric in thevalidate_drp
package.An example of a fully-specificed specification name:
validate_drp.PA1.design
This means: “the
design
specification of thePA1
metric in thevalidate_drp
package.A relative name is one that’s missing a component. For example:
PA1.design
Asserting this is a relative specification name, the package is not known.
Examples
Creation
There are many patterns for creating Name instances. Different patterns are useful in different circumstances.
You can create a metric name from its components:
>>> Name(package='validate_drp', metric='PA1') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1')
Or a specification name from components:
>>> Name(package='validate_drp', metric='PA1', spec='design') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design')
You can equivalently create
Name
s from fully-qualified strings:>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1')
>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1.design') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design')
You can also use an existing name to specify some components of the name:
>>> metric_name = Name('validate_drp.PA1') >>> Name(metric=metric_name, spec='design') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design')
A
TypeError
is raised if any components of the input names conflict.Fully-specified metric names can be mixed with a
spec
component:>>> Name(metric='validate_drp.PA1', spec='design') Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design')
String representation
Converting a
Name
into astr
gives you the canonical string representation, as fully-specified as possible:>>> str(Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design')) 'validate_drp.PA1.design'
Alternatively, obtain the fully-qualified metric name from the
Name.fqn
property:>>> name = Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design') >>> name.fqn 'validate_drp.PA1.design'
The relative name of a specification omits the package component:
>>> name = Name('validate_drp.PA1.design') >>> name.relative_name 'PA1.design'
Attributes Summary
fqn
The fully-qualified name ( str
).has_metric
True
if this object contains a metric name, eitherhas_package
True
if this object contains a package name (bool
).has_relative
True
if a relative specification name can be formed from thishas_spec
True
if this object contains a specification name, eitheris_fq
True
if this object is a fully-qualified name of either ais_metric
True
if this object is a metric name, either relative oris_package
True
if this object is a package name (bool
).is_relative
True
if this object is a specification name that’s notis_spec
True
if this object is a specification name, either relative ormetric
Metric name ( str
).package
Package name ( str
).relative_name
The relative specification name ( str
).spec
Specification name ( str
).Attributes Documentation
-
fqn
¶ The fully-qualified name (
str
).Raises: AttributeError
If the name is not a fully-qualified name (check
is_fq
)Examples
>>> Name('validate_drp', 'PA1').fqn 'validate_drp.PA1' >>> Name('validate_drp', 'PA1', 'design').fqn 'validate_drp.PA1.design'
-
has_metric
¶ True
if this object contains a metric name, either relative or fully-qualified (bool
).>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1').has_metric True >>> Name(spec='design').has_metric False
-
has_package
¶ True
if this object contains a package name (bool
).>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1').has_package True >>> Name(spec='design').has_package False
-
has_relative
¶ True
if a relative specification name can be formed from this object, i.e.,metric
andspec
attributes are set (bool
).
-
has_spec
¶ True
if this object contains a specification name, either relative or fully-qualified (bool
).>>> Name(spec='design').has_spec True >>> Name('validate_drp.PA1').has_spec False
-
is_fq
¶ True
if this object is a fully-qualified name of either a package, metric or specification (bool
).Examples
A fully-qualified package name:
>>> Name('validate_drp').is_fq True
A fully-qualified metric name:
>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1').is_fq True
A fully-qualified specification name:
>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1.design_gri').is_fq True
-
is_metric
¶ True
if this object is a metric name, either relative or fully-qualified (bool
).>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1').is_metric True >>> Name('validate_drp.PA1.design').is_metric False
-
is_package
¶ True
if this object is a package name (bool
).>>> Name('validate_drp').is_package True >>> Name('validate_drp.PA1').is_package False
-
is_relative
¶ True
if this object is a specification name that’s not fully-qualified, but is relative to a metric name (bool
). relative to a base name. (bool
).Package and metric names are never relative.
A relative specification name:
>>> Name(spec='PA1.design_gri').is_relative True
But not:
>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1.design_gri').is_relative False
-
is_spec
¶ True
if this object is a specification name, either relative or fully-qualified (bool
).>>> Name('validate_drp.PA1').is_spec False >>> Name('validate_drp.PA1.design').is_spec True
-
package
¶ Package name (
str
).>>> name = Name('validate_drp.PA1.design') >>> name.package 'validate_drp'
-