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Groups > comp.lang.python > #11667 > unrolled thread
| Started by | Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2011-08-17 02:06 -0700 |
| Last post | 2011-08-17 13:45 +0100 |
| Articles | 8 — 4 participants |
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CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> - 2011-08-17 02:06 -0700
Re: CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> - 2011-08-17 02:19 -0700
Re: CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2011-08-17 10:41 +0100
Re: CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Chris Rebert <clp2@rebertia.com> - 2011-08-17 09:23 -0700
Re: CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> - 2011-08-17 10:25 +0100
Re: CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> - 2011-08-17 20:52 -0700
Re: CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> - 2011-08-17 02:20 -0700
Re: CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables Nobody <nobody@nowhere.com> - 2011-08-17 13:45 +0100
| From | Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 02:06 -0700 |
| Subject | CGI: Assign FieldStorage values to variables |
| Message-ID | <92d066ff-d0ee-432f-b512-1f2fa01ba681@a12g2000yqi.googlegroups.com> |
I get a construct like this:
form=FieldStorage(None, None, [MiniFieldStorage('name1', 'Val1'),
MiniFieldStorage('name2', 'Val2'), MiniFieldStorage('name3', 'Val3')])
Now how would I assign every variable name* its value?
lI did try locals().update(form) however I get
>>> name2
-> MiniFieldStorage('name2', 'Val2')
when I need to assign the variable name2 the value Val2
This is Py3
-- Gnarlie
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| From | Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 02:19 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <bd2e169b-6bcb-4578-ac49-5fba344aa150@y16g2000yqh.googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #11667 |
I should add that this does what I want, but something a little more
Pythonic?
import cgi, os
os.environ["QUERY_STRING"] = "name1=Val1&name2=Val2&name3=Val3"
form=cgi.FieldStorage()
form
dict = {}
for key in form.keys(): dict[ key ] = form[ key ].value
dict
locals().update(dict)
name3
-- Gnarlie
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| From | Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 10:41 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.122.1313574104.27778.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #11669 |
On Wed, Aug 17, 2011 at 10:19 AM, Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> wrote:
> import cgi, os
> os.environ["QUERY_STRING"] = "name1=Val1&name2=Val2&name3=Val3"
> form=cgi.FieldStorage()
>
> form
>
> dict = {}
> for key in form.keys(): dict[ key ] = form[ key ].value
>
You could probably use a list comp for this, but there's not a lot of
difference. (By the way, you should be aware that you're shadowing the
builtin 'dict' here. That's not a problem, but be aware.)
dict.update(((key,form[key].value) for key in form))
That's a generator that returns a (key,value) tuple for each form
element, which update() will happily use.
But the last line:
> locals().update(dict)
is, IMHO, a very bad idea. Rename your dictionary to 'request' or
'data' or 'form' or something, and then reference form['name3']
instead; or, be explicit:
name3=form['name3']
Incidentally, you seem to be working at the module level, where
locals() is globals() (and I mean that literally - 'locals() is
globals()' is True). You may not be able to do this with locals() in a
function:
http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html#locals
Chris Angelico
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| From | Chris Rebert <clp2@rebertia.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 09:23 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.134.1313598183.27778.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #11669 |
On Wed, Aug 17, 2011 at 2:19 AM, Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> wrote:
> I should add that this does what I want, but something a little more
> Pythonic?
>
> import cgi, os
> os.environ["QUERY_STRING"] = "name1=Val1&name2=Val2&name3=Val3"
> form=cgi.FieldStorage()
>
> form
>
> dict = {}
> for key in form.keys(): dict[ key ] = form[ key ].value
>
> dict
> locals().update(dict)
> name3
Try it within a function. It will fail epic-ly in CPython and most
other implementations.
Read the note in the locals() docs:
http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html#locals
Cheers,
Chris
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| From | Chris Angelico <rosuav@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 10:25 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.121.1313573106.27778.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #11667 |
On Wed, Aug 17, 2011 at 10:06 AM, Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> wrote:
> I get a construct like this:
>
> form=FieldStorage(None, None, [MiniFieldStorage('name1', 'Val1'),
> MiniFieldStorage('name2', 'Val2'), MiniFieldStorage('name3', 'Val3')])
>
> when I need to assign the variable name2 the value Val2
You can probably do this with some kind of list comprehension, but I
recommend against it, if this has come from a web form. You do NOT
want end users having the power to set variables. Keep it in a
separate object (such as 'form') such that you must always be explicit
about fetching form data. PHP has learned the risks; here's a decent
summary:
http://www.php.net/manual/en/security.globals.php
Chris Angelico
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| From | Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 20:52 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <220b4dbe-cce9-4742-9b1f-441ddf9c05df@a13g2000yqd.googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #11670 |
On Aug 17, 3:25 am, Chris Angelico wrote: > You do NOT > want end users having the power to set variables. Thanks for the warning, I can see I will need to quarantine the form input. And update() is out of the question. -- Gnarlie http://Gnarlodious.com/
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| From | Gnarlodious <gnarlodious@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 02:20 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <33d4abcb-e017-430a-a46a-d1669f053c54@a12g2000yqi.googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #11667 |
I should add that this does what I want, but something a little more
Pythonic?
import cgi, os
os.environ["QUERY_STRING"] = "name1=Val1&name2=Val2&name3=Val3"
form=cgi.FieldStorage()
form
dict = {}
for key in form.keys(): dict[ key ] = form[ key ].value
dict
locals().update(dict)
name3
-- Gnarlie
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| From | Nobody <nobody@nowhere.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2011-08-17 13:45 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <pan.2011.08.17.12.45.36.46000@nowhere.com> |
| In reply to | #11667 |
On Wed, 17 Aug 2011 02:06:31 -0700, Gnarlodious wrote:
> I get a construct like this:
>
> form=FieldStorage(None, None, [MiniFieldStorage('name1', 'Val1'),
> MiniFieldStorage('name2', 'Val2'), MiniFieldStorage('name3', 'Val3')])
>
> Now how would I assign every variable name* its value?
Don't do this. It will allow the user to set any variable they wish,
not just the ones you want them to, which is a major security flaw. PHP
had this as a language feature (controlled by the register_globals
directive), and it was rightly decried as a major security flaw.
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