I have a class that contains only fields and no methods, like this:
class Request(object):
def __init__(self, environ):
self.environ = environ
self.request_method = environ.get('REQUEST_METHOD', None)
self.url_scheme = environ.get('wsgi.url_scheme', None)
self.request_uri = wsgiref.util.request_uri(environ)
self.path = environ.get('PATH_INFO', None)
# ...
This could easily be translated to a dict. The class is more flexible for future additions and could be fast with __slots__
. So would there be a benefit of using a dict instead? Would a dict be faster than a class? And faster than a class with slots?
Why would you make this a dictionary? What's the advantage? What happens if you later want to add some code? Where would your __init__
code go?
Classes are for bundling related data (and usually code).
Dictionaries are for storing key-value relationships, where usually the keys are all of the same type, and all the values are also of one type. Occasionally they can be useful for bundling data when the key/attribute names are not all known up front, but often this a sign that something's wrong with your design.
Keep this a class.