Automatically Revert Temporary Value Changes in a with Block
The new rollback() API introduced in triggon v2.0.0 can automatically revert temporary changes to variables and attributes made in a with block. It also supports local variables, so it's only avail...

Source: DEV Community
The new rollback() API introduced in triggon v2.0.0 can automatically revert temporary changes to variables and attributes made in a with block. It also supports local variables, so it's only available on CPython 3.13+. Code Example Here's a simple example. In this example, the variable x is assigned 99 inside the block, but once the block exits, it's restored to its original value, 1. from triggon import Triggon x = 1 with Triggon.rollback(): x = 99 print(x) # 99 print(x) # 1 You can also pass the names of variables or attributes to rollback(), so only the specified targets will be restored. class A: a = 10 x = 0 # x isn't included in the rollback target with Triggon.rollback("A.a"): x = 99 A.a = -10 print(x) # 99 print(A.a) # -10 print(x) # 99 print(A.a) # 10 Variables defined inside the block aren't restored. triggon recently had a major update with 8 new APIs. You can check the details in the release notes. triggon is basically a label-based library, but rollback() can be used easi