Whats up with people posting the most confusing and unclear questions on earth. Granted if you dont know what you really talking about its kinda hard to post a clear question.
I think this is the first time I've seen a context manager used in this way. Maybe I'm just living a sheltered existence. It that totally equivalent to with open('blah') as blah: particularly in calling __exit__ correctly?
Actually, is it the first time I've seen it? I guess the file handler is lazy and so it's equivalent to loads of other things like SQLAlchemy engines?
with x as y: isn't necessarily equivalent to y = x; with x:. The as takes the value returned from __enter__. It's very rare to see a context manager that doesn't return self though
@Aran-Fey I do that regularly. Makes it safer to not have partially working or protected objects exposed.
Though it's a hassle that context managers don't have a proper method for that, unlike iteration having both __iter__ for creating the iterator and then __next__ for using it.
That makes me feel slightly better about my question; I looked back and thought "man, you don't know about this?" :P After being bitten with context managers in SQL, I'm wary about how people use them in practice
I've had some success with classes that need you to call an @contextmanager @classmethod constructor instead of just initialising them. That makes misusing them a bit more difficult, but it's quite a chore and doesn't always work.
FWIW, I think RAII as in C++/Rust/... is the better pattern there. In some way, many people implicitly use the same in Python, relying on CPython's refcounting+__del__.
Conceptually I like python's with more, but it does suck that you either have to do the initialization in __init__ or have the object be in a partially "initialized" state before __enter__ is called
Recent experience of using asyncio for handling highly concurrent automation: mixed! 100 points for "managing more processes than any sane person would want" but 0 points for "providing primitives for handling backpressure".