I\'m writing a game engine using pygame and box2d, and in the character builder, I want to be able to write the code that will be executed on keydown events.
My plan
As others have pointed out, you can load the text into a string and use exec "codestring"
. If contained in a file already, using execfile will avoid having to load it.
One performance note: You should avoid execing the code multiple times, as parsing and compiling the python source is a slow process. ie. don't have:
def keydown(self, key):
exec user_code
You can improve this a little by compiling the source into a code object (with compile()
and exec that, or better, by constructing a function that you keep around, and only build once. Either require the user to write "def my_handler(args...)", or prepend it yourself, and do something like:
user_source = "def user_func(args):\n" + '\n'.join(" "+line for line in user_source.splitlines())
d={}
exec user_source in d
user_func = d['user_func']
Then later:
if key == K_a:
user_func(args)
You can use the eval(string) method to do this.
eval(code, globals=None, locals=None)
The code is just standard Python code - this means that it still needs to be properly indented.
The globals can have a custom __builtins__
defined, which could be useful for security purposes.
eval("print('Hello')")
Would print hello
to the console. You can also specify local and global variables for the code to use:
eval("print('Hello, %s'%name)", {}, {'name':'person-b'})
Be careful, though. Any user input will be executed. Consider:
eval("import os;os.system('sudo rm -rf /')")
There are a number of ways around that. The easiest is to do something like:
eval("import os;...", {'os':None})
Which will throw an exception, rather than erasing your hard drive. While your program is desktop, this could be a problem if people redistributed scripts, which I imagine is intended.
Here's an example of using eval
rather strangely:
def hello() : print('Hello')
def world() : print('world')
CURRENT_MOOD = 'happy'
eval(get_code(), {'contrivedExample':__main__}, {'hi':hello}.update(locals()))
What this does on the eval line is:
contrivedExample
to the script). The consumer can call contrivedExample.hello()
now.)hi
as pointing to hello
It turns out (thanks commenters!) that you actually need to use the exec
statement. Big oops. The revised examples are as follows:
exec
Definition(This looks familiar!)
Exec is a statement:
exec "code" [in scope]
Where scope is a dictionary of both local and global variables. If this is not specified, it executes in the current scope.
The code is just standard Python code - this means that it still needs to be properly indented.
exec
Exampleexec "print('hello')"
Would print hello
to the console. You can also specify local and global variables for the code to use:
eval "print('hello, '+name)" in {'name':'person-b'}
exec
Security ConcernsBe careful, though. Any user input will be executed. Consider:
exec "import os;os.system('sudo rm -rf /')"
As also noted by commenters, print
is a statement in all versions of Python prior to 3.0. In 2.6, the behaviour can be changed by typing from __future__ import print_statement
. Otherwise, use:
print "hello"
Instead of :
print("hello")
eval or exec. You should definitely read Python library reference before programming.
You can use eval()