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You already know about data attributes, which are variables owned by a specific instance of a class. Python also supports class attributes, which are variables owned by the class itself.
Пример 3.18. Introducing class attributes
class MP3FileInfo(FileInfo):
"хранит ID3v1.0 MP3 теги"
tagDataMap = {"title" : ( 3, 33, stripnulls),
"artist" : ( 33, 63, stripnulls),
"album" : ( 63, 93, stripnulls),
"year" : ( 93, 97, stripnulls),
"comment" : ( 97, 126, stripnulls),
"genre" : (127, 128, ord)}
>>> import fileinfo
>>> fileinfo.MP3FileInfo
<class fileinfo.MP3FileInfo at 01257FDC>
>>> fileinfo.MP3FileInfo.tagDataMap
{'title': (3, 33, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'genre': (127, 128, <built-in function ord>),
'artist': (33, 63, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'year': (93, 97, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'comment': (97, 126, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'album': (63, 93, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>)}
>>> m = fileinfo.MP3FileInfo()
>>> m.tagDataMap
{'title': (3, 33, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'genre': (127, 128, <built-in function ord>),
'artist': (33, 63, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'year': (93, 97, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'comment': (97, 126, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>),
'album': (63, 93, <function stripnulls at 0260C8D4>)}
In Java, both static variables (called class attributes in Python) and instance variables (called data attributes in Python) are defined immediately after the class definition (one with the static keyword, one without). In Python, only class attributes can be defined here; data attributes are defined in the __init__ method. |
Class attributes can be used as class-level constants (which is how we use them in MP3FileInfo), but they are not really constants.[4] You can also change them.
Пример 3.19. Modifying class attributes
>>> class counter:
... count = 0
... def __init__(self)
... self.__class__.count += 1
...
>>> counter
<class __main__.counter at 010EAECC>
>>> counter.count
0
>>> c = counter()
>>> c.count
1
>>> counter.count
1
>>> d = counter()
>>> d.count
2
>>> c.count
2
>>> counter.count
2
Footnotes
[4] There are no constants in Python. Everything can be changed if you try hard enough. This fits with one of the core principles of Python: bad behavior should be discouraged but not banned. If you really want to change the value of None, you can do it, but don't come running to me when your code is impossible to debug.
Advanced special class methods | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 | Private functions |
Copyright © 2000, 2001, 2002 Марк Пилгрим Copyright © 2001, 2002 Перевод, Денис Откидач |