python-dependency-injector/docs/providers/factory.rst

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Factory providers
-----------------
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``di.Factory`` provider creates new instance of specified class on every call.
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Nothing could be better than brief example:
.. image:: /images/providers/factory.png
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:width: 80%
:align: center
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory.py
:language: python
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Factory providers and __init__ injections
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``di.Factory`` takes a various number of positional and keyword arguments that
are used as ``__init__()`` injections. Every time, when ``di.Factory``
creates new one instance, positional and keyword argument injections would be
passed as an instance's arguments.
Such behaviour is very similar to the standard Python ``functools.partial``
object, except of one thing: all injectable values are provided
*"as is"*, except of providers (subclasses of ``di.Provider``). Providers
will be called every time, when injection needs to be done. For example,
if injectable value of injection is a ``di.Factory``, it will provide new one
instance (as a result of its call) every time, when injection needs to be done.
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Example below is a little bit more complicated. It shows how to create
``di.Factory`` of particular class with ``__init__()`` argument injections
which injectable values are also provided by another factories:
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.. note::
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Current positional and keyword argument injections syntax (in the examples
below) is a **simplified one** version of full syntax. Examples of full
syntax and other types of injections could be found in sections below.
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While positional / keyword argument injections may be the best way of
passing injections, current simplified syntax might be the preferable one
and could be widely used.
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.. image:: /images/providers/factory_init_injections.png
:width: 90%
:align: center
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Example of usage positional argument injections:
.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_init_args.py
:language: python
Example of usage keyword argument injections:
.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_init_kwargs.py
:language: python
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Factory providers and __init__ injections priority
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Next example shows how ``di.Factory`` provider deals with positional and
keyword ``__init__()`` context arguments. In few words, ``di.Factory``
behaviour here is very like a standard Python ``functools.partial``:
- Positional context arguments will be appended after ``di.Factory``
positional injections.
- Keyword context arguments have priority on ``di.Factory`` keyword injections
and will be merged over them.
So, please, follow the example below:
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.. image:: /images/providers/factory_init_injections_and_contexts.png
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_init_injections_and_contexts.py
:language: python
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Factory providers and other types of injections
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Objects can take dependencies in different forms (some objects take init
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arguments, other use attributes setting or method calls). It affects how
such objects are created and initialized.
``di.Factory`` provider takes various number of positional and keyword
arguments, that define what kinds of dependency injections have to be used.
All of those instructions are defined in ``di.injections`` module and are
subclasses of ``di.injections.Injection`` (shortcut ``di.Injection``). There
are several types of injections that are used by ``di.Factory`` provider:
+ ``di.Arg`` - injection is done by passing injectable value in object's
``__init__()`` method in time of object's creation as positional argument.
Takes injectable value only.
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+ ``di.KwArg`` - injection is done by passing injectable value in object's
``__init__()`` method in time of object's creation as keyword argument.
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Takes keyword name of ``__init__()`` argument and injectable value.
+ ``di.Attribute`` - injection is done by setting specified attribute with
injectable value right after object's creation. Takes attribute's name
and injectable value.
+ ``di.Method`` - injection is done by calling of specified method with
injectable value right after object's creation and attribute injections
are done. Takes method name and injectable value.
All ``di.Injection``'s injectable values are provided *"as is"*, except of
providers (subclasses of ``di.Provider``). Providers will be called every time,
when injection needs to be done.
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Factory providers and attribute injections
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Example below shows how to create ``di.Factory`` of particular class with
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attribute injections. Those injections are done by setting specified attributes
with injectable values right after object's creation.
Example:
.. image:: /images/providers/factory_attribute_injections.png
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_attribute_injections.py
:language: python
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Factory providers and method injections
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Current example shows how to create ``di.Factory`` of particular class with
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method injections. Those injections are done by calling of specified method
with injectable value right after object's creation and attribute injections
are done.
Method injections are not very popular in Python due Python best practices
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(usage of public attributes instead of setter methods), but they may appear in
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some cases.
Example:
.. image:: /images/providers/factory_method_injections.png
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_method_injections.py
:language: python
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Factory providers delegation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
``di.Factory`` provider could be delegated to any other provider via any kind
of injection. As it was mentioned earlier, if ``di.Factory`` is injectable
value, it will be called every time when injection is done. ``di.Factory``
delegation is performed by wrapping delegated ``di.Factory`` into special
provider type - ``di.Delegate``, that just returns wrapped ``di.Factory``.
Saying in other words, delegation of factories - is a way to inject factories
themselves, instead of results of their calls.
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Actually, there are two ways of creating factory delegates:
+ ``di.Delegate(di.Factory(...))`` - obviously wrapping factory into
``di.Delegate`` provider.
+ ``di.Factory(...).delegate()`` - calling factory ``delegate()`` method, that
returns delegate wrapper for current factory.
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Example:
.. image:: /images/providers/factory_delegation.png
:width: 85%
:align: center
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_delegation.py
:language: python