[Python-Dev] Callable, non-descriptor class attributes.
Guido van Rossum
guido at python.org
Sat Mar 12 04:48:41 CET 2011
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Sat Mar 12 04:48:41 CET 2011
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On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 10:09 PM, Steven D'Aprano <steve at pearwood.info> wrote: > Thomas Wouters wrote: >> >> One of the things brought up at the language summit (and I believe at the >> VM >> summit, although I wasn't there) was the unpredictable behaviour of >> callables turning into methods when they're class attributes. > > [...] >> >> 1. Make staticmethod a callable object directly (it isn't, currently) and >> apply it to any Python function that replaces a (in CPython) CFunction. >> The >> change to staticmethod may be a good idea regardless, but the policy of >> making other implementations comply to this quirk in CPython seems (to me) >> like unnecessary descrimination[*]. > > I've been bitten by the (to me) surprising fact that staticmethod objects > are not directly callable. It's hard to write a method/function inside a > class which is callable both when the class is being created, and > afterwards, even though naively staticmethod seems like it should do the > job. A toy example: > > > class Toy(object): > @staticmethod > def spam(n): > return ' '.join(['spam']*n) > lunch = spam(5) + "with a fried egg on top" > > > +1 on making staticmethods callable. I would have found that useful in the > past. IIUC Thomas found that this breaks some current use of staticmethod. >> 4. Make it an error to have a callable class attribute that isn't a >> descriptor (although maybe we only discussed this one in my head.) > > Do you mean to make one, or both, of these an error? > > class C: > spam = len Making this illegal is what #4 means, yes. But I find it unacceptable. > C.__dict__['ham'] = lambda: None This is already illegal (except for classic classes in Python 2). Also lambda creates a standard function object so it *is* (or *has*?) a descriptor. -- --Guido van Rossum (python.org/~guido)
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