-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Vladislav Vorobiev wrote:
Thierry Florac wrote:
Le vendredi 29 janvier 2010, Vladislav Vorobiev <vavvav@mykniga.de> a écrit : ====================================================================== ...
Thierry thank you for answer but it doesn't help.
I implement all what you sad. I tried with normal “list” and than swiched to “PersistentList”
code looks like that:
from persistent.list import PersistentList import transaction
<snip>
myList=PersistentList([self.context.pfad, 'object]) myList[0] = PersistentList([self.context.pfad, 'object])[0] #hope I anderstud you right
ob.refList= myList ob._p_changed = True ob.refList._p_changed = True self.context._setObject(id, ob)
After add I call again:
ob._p_changed = True ob.refList._p_changed = True transaction.commit()
I see the commitet trunsactions in ZMI
The same problem. After restart ist the Attribut not in context.
For example return's
Before restart: ***1 ob.refList[0].objectValues()[0].absolute_url() /pfad/object/FirstObjectOfReferencedObject
After restart only the id of the object: ob.refList[0].objectValues()[0].absolute_url() FirstObjectOfReferencedObject
Here is a place for an other question:
Normaly self.absolute_url() returns url with hostname, (http://localhost/bla/bla) but already befor restart I get without http://localhost/... see ***1
It seem's that I forgot something. I would be glad to if somebody explain me this problem.
======================================================================
In fact I'm not really sure to understand your data structure and it's goals... Could you explain me what you want to do ??
Thierry
I want to set some references from object to another object through. I try to explain this with example classes.
Example with two classes:
#Create classes
class School: pass
class People: pass
#Create objects
p=People()
s0=School() s0.name="Konrad School"
s1=School s1.name="Leopold School"
Now I set the referece
p.school1=s0 p.school2=s1
Now I can access through the attribut to s0 and s1 objects:
p.school1.name “Konrad School“
This construction works persistent without problems.
The idea is to put the references in a list.
p.schools=[s0,s1]
to access them
p.schools[0].name “Konrad School“
s1.name="Leo School" p.schools[1].name “Leo School“
type(p.schools[1]) <type 'classobj'>
It works in zope without restart. If the server was restartet I get some unwanted results. See my previews posts. The same effects I get with PersistentLists...
I hope it is more understandable.
You can't expect to use a simple list as an attribute of a persistent object without taking special precautions. Either you have methods which mutate the list, and then set the '_p_changed' attribute to 1: def addSchool(self, school): self.schools.append(school) self._p_changed = 1 or re-assign the list attribute: def addSchool(self, school): schools = self.schools schools.append(school) self.schools = schools You shoule be able to use a PersistentList instead of a "plain" Python list to avoid the need for one of those two problems: from persistent.list import PersistentList ... class Person: def __init__(self): self.schools = PersistentList() Tres. - -- =================================================================== Tres Seaver +1 540-429-0999 tseaver@palladion.com Palladion Software "Excellence by Design" http://palladion.com -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.9 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iEYEARECAAYFAktmC68ACgkQ+gerLs4ltQ7YwACgmVuBDXwBykODaN4oCavOYRAD E3MAn1QRQmlSWSnyFvahj8N9rk4+6eXJ =Vz6h -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----