* iterates over an object and uses its elements as arguments. ** iterates over an object's keys and uses __getitem__ (equivalent to bracket notation) to fetch key-value pairs. To customize *, simply make your object iterable, and to customize **, make your object a mapping:
class MyIterable(object):
def __iter__(self):
return iter([1, 2, 3])
class MyMapping(collections.Mapping):
def __iter__(self):
return iter('123')
def __getitem__(self, item):
return int(item)
def __len__(self):
return 3
If you want * and ** to do something besides what's described above, you can't. I don't have a documentation reference for that statement (since it's easier to find documentation for "you can do this" than "you can't do this"), but I have a source quote. The bytecode interpreter loop in PyEval_EvalFrameEx calls ext_do_call to implement function calls with * or ** arguments. ext_do_call contains the following code:
if (!PyDict_Check(kwdict)) {
PyObject *d;
d = PyDict_New();
if (d == NULL)
goto ext_call_fail;
if (PyDict_Update(d, kwdict) != 0) {
which, if the ** argument is not a dict, creates a dict and performs an ordinary update to initialize it from the keyword arguments (except that PyDict_Update won't accept a list of key-value pairs). Thus, you can't customize ** separately from implementing the mapping protocol.
Similarly, for * arguments, ext_do_call performs
if (!PyTuple_Check(stararg)) {
PyObject *t = NULL;
t = PySequence_Tuple(stararg);
which is equivalent to tuple(args). Thus, you can't customize * separately from ordinary iteration.
It'd be horribly confusing if f(*thing) and f(*iter(thing)) did different things. In any case, * and ** are part of the function call syntax, not separate operators, so customizing them (if possible) would be the callable's job, not the argument's. I suppose there could be use cases for allowing the callable to customize them, perhaps to pass dict subclasses like defaultdict through...