Metadata-Version: 2.4
Name: injector_collections
Version: 0.0.24
Summary: Collections for the Injector Package
Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/bschnitz/injector_collections
Project-URL: Issues, https://github.com/bschnitz/injector_collections/issues
Author-email: Benjamin Schnitzler <regenbogenbauer@web.de>
License-File: LICENSE
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Requires-Python: >=3.12
Requires-Dist: jinja2>=3.1
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown

# Injector Collections

This package adds collections to the
[Injector](https://github.com/python-injector/injector) python package. A
collection is an injectable class containing several other classes, which were
tagged using the `@CollectionItem` keyword and a designated `Collection`-class.

## Installation

```
pip install injector_collections
```

## Setup

To be able to use this package, You must create a new module-directory inside
your python project. The name of this module-directory does not matter, let's
name it `my_collections` here. Inside this module-directory You must create a
file (module) named `stubs.py` (and of course an `__init__.py`).

Provided your root-directory is named `src`, the following file-tree will be the
result:
```
src
└── my_collections
    ├── __init__.py
    └── stubs.py
```

All files can be initially empty.

## Usage / Example

Be sure to have done everything described in [Setup](#setup).

Let's say You have an application and want to add several plugins which are all
used in the app afterwards, but of course this list of plugins must be easily
extensible. You already use injector to instantiate your App:

```python
# app.py

from injector import inject

class App:
    @inject
     def __init__(self, '''plugins shall be injected here''', '''some other injected classes'''):
         # here comes some code

         def run(self):
             # plugins should be executed here
             # runs the app

from injector import Injector

injector = Injector()
outer = injector.get(App)
```

Now the first step is to create a stub collection for your plugins:
``` python
# my_collections/stub.py

from injector_collections import Collection

class PluginCollection(Collection):
    pass
```
**Note:** The collection class (here `PluginCollection`) should not have any
implementation. Currently any implementation will just be ignored and cannot be
used after the actual class was generated from the stub.

Next add some Plugins as an example. And Tag them with `@PluginCollection` and
your previously defined `PluginCollection` as argument:
```python
# plugins.py

from injector_collections import CollectionItem
# The @CollectionItem decorator needs those stubs as argument
from my_collections.stubs import PluginCollection

@CollectionItem(PluginCollection)
class HelloPlugin:
    def run(self):
        print("Hello Friends!")

@CollectionItem(PluginCollection)
class GoodbyPlugin:
    def run(self):
        print("Goodby Friends!")
```

**Important:** Currently you need to import `CollectionItem` literally, as the
code will be scanned for files containing the `@CollectionItem` string, which
will then be imported to generate the collections!

Now we're almost done. The last thing to do, before we can use our actual
collections is to generate them, of course! Create a small script under your
projects root-directory:

```python
# generate.py
from injector import inject
from injector_collections import generateCollections
# First argument of generateCollections is your my_collections-module name, the
# second a list of modules containing any collection items (in this case your
# plugins-module).
generateCollections(inject, "my_collections", ['plugins'])
```

And execute it:
```
python ./generate.py
```

Now you just need to import the `PluginCollection` to your `App` and use it:

```python
# app.py

# mark that this time, we import from the generated collections, not the stubs!
from my_collections.generated import PluginCollection

from plugins import HelloPlugin

from injector import inject

class App:
    @inject
     def __init__(self, plugins: PluginCollection, '''some other injected classes'''):
         # here comes some code
         self.plugins = plugins

         def run(self):
             # plugins.items contains a dict containing the plugins:
             for plugin in self.plugins.items.values():
                 plugin.run() # prints "Hello Friends!" and "Goodby Friends!"
             # Or just call a single plugin from the collection:
             self.plugins[HelloPlugin].run()
             # also getting plugins simply by class name (if unambigous in this
             # collection) is possible
             self.plugins.byClassname['HelloPlugin'].run()
...
```

### Type Hinting for Items in a Collection

If all items in a collection e.g. implement a common Interface, the generated
Collections may make use of type-Hinting. Simply implement a
`getItemType`-Method in your stubs like that:
``` python
# my_collections/stub.py

from plugins import PluginInterface
from injector_collections import Collection

class PluginCollection(Collection):
    @classmethod
    def getItemType(cls):
        return PluginInterface
```

After that the `PluginCollection.items`, `PluginCollection.__get__`,
`PluginCollection.__set__` und `PluginCollection.byClassname` attributes/methods
have proper type hints on `PluginItemInterface`.

### Items with Assisted Injection

If some of the items in the created collection have non-injectable parameters,
one can use the `assisted`-parameter for the `@CollectionItem`-decorator, e.g.:
```python
from injector_collections import CollectionItem
from my_collections.stubs import PluginCollection

@CollectionItem(PluginCollection, assisted=True)
class HelloPlugin:
    def __init__(someNotInjectableParameter: SomeClass):
        self.param = someNotInjectableParameter 

    def run(self):
        print("Hello Friends!")
```

Now the item will not be directly injected into the Collection, but instead a
`ClassAssitedBuilder` instance for that item. Don't forget to adjust the [type
hinting](type-hinting-for-items-in-a-collection).

## FAQ or Why does it not work?

The process of creating the collections is quite clumsy and assumes that the
developer sets quite a lot of things right. If it does not work, it is quite
likely, that You just forgot one of these awful details:

- Is there a stub for the collection?
- Are all items annotated with @CollectionItem?
- Is the Type-Argument of @CollectionItem the correct collection (stub)?
- Are the items all inside a proper module hierarchy (the directory and all
  parent directories of the items should contain an `__init__.py`).
- Have You generated the collections using `generateCollections`?
- Did You add the module or a parent module of the items to the module list of
  `generateCollections`?

When the complexity of the project increases, it is quite likely, that You will
encounter recursive import problems. Some things You can do:

- Import only stubs, wherever possible.
- If You just need typehinting for a class, which may cause import recursion.
  You can import it *only for type-checking* like this:
  ```python
  from abc import abstractmethod
  from typing import TYPE_CHECKING

  # avoid circular imports, we only need PipelineContext for the LSP (type check)
  if TYPE_CHECKING:
      from xyz import Someclass

  class SomeInterface:
      @abstractmethod
      def hello() -> 'SomeClass':
          pass
  ```
- There are some really strange cases, where a certain collection name causes an
  error with `injector`. I can't say, if it's a bug in `injector` or
  `injector_collections`. Just try another collection name.
- If the project grows, there may be circular dependencies, because all stubs
  are in a single file. That can be circumvented by changing the file structure:
  ```
  src
  └── my_collections
      ├── __init__.py
      └── stubs
          ├── __init__.py
          ├── PluginCollection.py
          └── SomeOtherCollection.py
  ```
  `__init__.py` must have the following contents:
  ```python
  from my_collections.stubs.PluginCollection import *
  from my_collections.stubs.SomeOtherCollection import *
  ... # other collection definitions not included in a seperate file
  ```
  Now import from `my_collections.stubs.PluginCollection` and
  `my_collections.stubs.SomeOtherCollection` seperately in your code when using
  `@CollectionItem(PluginCollection)` or `@CollectionItem(SomeOtherCollection)`.
- There may be another bug, especially related to assisted injection. This may
  be circumvented with using different imports on collection generation and
  afterwards:
  ```python
  if GENERATING_INJECTOR_COLLECTIONS:
      from my_collections.generated import PluginCollection
  else:
      from injection.collections.generated.PluginCollection import PluginCollection
  ```
