Issue
Any way to return name of instance attribute in method it calls on assignment?
class MyClass:
def __init__(self):
self.not_relevant = 0
self.name_to_return = self.assign_own_name()
def assign_own_name(self):
return "name_to_return" # to replace
assert MyClass().name_to_return == 'name_to_return'
Use case: multiple attribute are initialized and value supplying instance method operates on basis of attribute name.
def __init__(self):
self.name_1 = do('name_1')
...
self.name_n = do('name_n')
def do(self, x):
return x # e.g. db query
Solution
If you override the setattr dunder method, you can do it like this:
class Class:
def __init__(self):
pass
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
super(Class, self).__setattr__(name, value)
return name
_class = Class()
print(_class.__setattr__('foo', 'bar'))
print(_class.foo)
Output:
foo
bar
Whilst...
_class.foo = 'bar'
...would still be syntactically correct you can't get the return value from such an assignment. If assignment expressions (walrus operator) worked with attributes then it would be easy but that's not allowed
Answered By - OldBill
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