2015-02-27 14:07:44 -05:00
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PEP: 487
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Title: Simpler customisation of class creation
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Martin Teichmann <lkb.teichmann@gmail.com>,
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 27-Feb-2015
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Python-Version: 3.6
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Post-History: 27-Feb-2015, 5-Feb-2016
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Replaces: 422
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Abstract
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========
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Currently, customising class creation requires the use of a custom metaclass.
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This custom metaclass then persists for the entire lifecycle of the class,
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creating the potential for spurious metaclass conflicts.
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This PEP proposes to instead support a wide range of customisation
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scenarios through a new ``__init_subclass__`` hook in the class body,
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a hook to initialize descriptors, and a way to keep the order in which
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attributes are defined.
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Those hooks should at first be defined in a metaclass in the standard
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library, with the option that this metaclass eventually becomes the
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default ``type`` metaclass.
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The new mechanism should be easier to understand and use than
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implementing a custom metaclass, and thus should provide a gentler
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introduction to the full power Python's metaclass machinery.
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Background
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==========
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2016-02-06 00:26:52 -05:00
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Metaclasses are a powerful tool to customize class creation. They have,
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however, the problem that there is no automatic way to combine metaclasses.
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If one wants to use two metaclasses for a class, a new metaclass combining
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those two needs to be created, typically manually.
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2016-02-06 00:26:52 -05:00
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This need often occurs as a surprise to a user: inheriting from two base
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classes coming from two different libraries suddenly raises the necessity
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to manually create a combined metaclass, where typically one is not
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interested in those details about the libraries at all. This becomes
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even worse if one library starts to make use of a metaclass which it
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has not done before. While the library itself continues to work perfectly,
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suddenly every code combining those classes with classes from another library
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fails.
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Proposal
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========
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While there are many possible ways to use a metaclass, the vast majority
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of use cases falls into just three categories: some initialization code
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running after class creation, the initialization of descriptors and
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keeping the order in which class attributes were defined.
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Those three use cases can easily be performed by just one metaclass. If
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this metaclass is put into the standard library, and all libraries that
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wish to customize class creation use this very metaclass, no combination
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of metaclasses is necessary anymore.
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The three use cases are achieved as follows:
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1. The metaclass contains an ``__init_subclass__`` hook that initializes
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all subclasses of a given class,
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2. the metaclass calls an ``__init_descriptor__`` hook for all descriptors
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defined in the class, and
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3. an ``__attribute_order__`` tuple is left in the class in order to inspect
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the order in which attributes were defined.
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For ease of use, a base class ``SubclassInit`` is defined, which uses said
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metaclass and contains an empty stub for the hook described for use case 1.
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As an example, the first use case looks as follows::
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class SpamBase(SubclassInit):
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# this is implicitly a @classmethod
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def __init_subclass__(cls, **kwargs):
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# This is invoked after a subclass is created, but before
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# explicit decorators are called.
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# The usual super() mechanisms are used to correctly support
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# multiple inheritance.
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# **kwargs are the keyword arguments to the subclasses'
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# class creation statement
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super().__init_subclass__(cls, **kwargs)
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class Spam(SpamBase):
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pass
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# the new hook is called on Spam
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The base class ``SubclassInit`` contains an empty ``__init_subclass__``
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method which serves as an endpoint for cooperative multiple inheritance.
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Note that this method has no keyword arguments, meaning that all
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methods which are more specialized have to process all keyword
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arguments.
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This general proposal is not a new idea (it was first suggested for
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inclusion in the language definition `more than 10 years ago`_, and a
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similar mechanism has long been supported by `Zope's ExtensionClass`_),
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but the situation has changed sufficiently in recent years that
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the idea is worth reconsidering for inclusion.
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The second part of the proposal adds an ``__init_descriptor__``
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initializer for descriptors. Descriptors are defined in the body of a
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class, but they do not know anything about that class, they do not
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even know the name they are accessed with. They do get to know their
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owner once ``__get__`` is called, but still they do not know their
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name. This is unfortunate, for example they cannot put their
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associated value into their object's ``__dict__`` under their name,
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since they do not know that name. This problem has been solved many
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times, and is one of the most important reasons to have a metaclass in
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a library. While it would be easy to implement such a mechanism using
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the first part of the proposal, it makes sense to have one solution
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for this problem for everyone.
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To give an example of its usage, imagine a descriptor representing weak
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referenced values (this is an insanely simplified, yet working example)::
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import weakref
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class WeakAttribute:
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def __get__(self, instance, owner):
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return instance.__dict__[self.name]
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def __set__(self, instance, value):
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instance.__dict__[self.name] = weakref.ref(value)
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# this is the new initializer:
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def __init_descriptor__(self, owner, name):
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self.name = name
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The third part of the proposal is to leave a tuple called
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``__attribute_order__`` in the class that contains the order in which
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the attributes were defined. This is a very common usecase, many
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libraries use an ``OrderedDict`` to store this order. This is a very
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simple way to achieve the same goal.
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Key Benefits
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============
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Easier inheritance of definition time behaviour
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-----------------------------------------------
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Understanding Python's metaclasses requires a deep understanding of
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the type system and the class construction process. This is legitimately
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seen as challenging, due to the need to keep multiple moving parts (the code,
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the metaclass hint, the actual metaclass, the class object, instances of the
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class object) clearly distinct in your mind. Even when you know the rules,
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it's still easy to make a mistake if you're not being extremely careful.
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Understanding the proposed implicit class initialization hook only requires
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ordinary method inheritance, which isn't quite as daunting a task. The new
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hook provides a more gradual path towards understanding all of the phases
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involved in the class definition process.
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Reduced chance of metaclass conflicts
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-------------------------------------
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One of the big issues that makes library authors reluctant to use metaclasses
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(even when they would be appropriate) is the risk of metaclass conflicts.
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These occur whenever two unrelated metaclasses are used by the desired
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parents of a class definition. This risk also makes it very difficult to
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*add* a metaclass to a class that has previously been published without one.
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By contrast, adding an ``__init_subclass__`` method to an existing type poses
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a similar level of risk to adding an ``__init__`` method: technically, there
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is a risk of breaking poorly implemented subclasses, but when that occurs,
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it is recognised as a bug in the subclass rather than the library author
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breaching backwards compatibility guarantees.
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A path of introduction into Python
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==================================
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Most of the benefits of this PEP can already be implemented using
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a simple metaclass. For the ``__init_subclass__`` hook this works
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all the way down to Python 2.7, while the attribute order needs Python 3.0
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to work. Such a class has been `uploaded to PyPI`_.
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The only drawback of such a metaclass are the mentioned problems with
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metaclasses and multiple inheritance. Two classes using such a
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metaclass can only be combined, if they use exactly the same such
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metaclass. This fact calls for the inclusion of such a class into the
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standard library, let's call it ``SubclassMeta``, with the base class
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using it called ``SubclassInit``. Once all users use this standard
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library metaclass, classes from different packages can easily be
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combined.
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But still such classes cannot be easily combined with other classes
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using other metaclasses. Authors of metaclasses should bear that in
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mind and inherit from the standard metaclass if it seems useful
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for users of the metaclass to add more functionality. Ultimately,
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if the need for combining with other metaclasses is strong enough,
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the proposed functionality may be introduced into Python's ``type``.
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Those arguments strongly hint to the following procedure to include
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the proposed functionality into Python:
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1. The metaclass implementing this proposal is put onto PyPI, so that
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it can be used and scrutinized.
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2. Once the code is properly mature, it can be added to the Python
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standard library. There should be a new module called
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``metaclass`` which collects tools for metaclass authors, as well
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as a documentation of the best practices of how to write
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metaclasses.
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3. If the need of combining this metaclass with other metaclasses is
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strong enough, it may be included into Python itself.
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While the metaclass is still in the standard library and not in the
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language, it may still clash with other metaclasses. The most
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prominent metaclass in use is probably ABCMeta. It is also a
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particularly good example for the need of combining metaclasses. For
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users who want to define an ABC with subclass initialization, we should
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support a ``ABCSubclassInit`` class, or let ABCMeta inherit from this
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PEP's metaclass.
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Extensions written in C or C++ also often define their own metaclass.
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It would be very useful if those could also inherit from the metaclass
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defined here, but this is probably not possible.
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New Ways of Using Classes
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=========================
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This proposal has many usecases like the following. In the examples,
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we still inherit from the ``SubclassInit`` base class. This would
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become unnecessary once this PEP is included in Python directly.
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Subclass registration
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---------------------
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Especially when writing a plugin system, one likes to register new
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subclasses of a plugin baseclass. This can be done as follows::
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class PluginBase(SubclassInit):
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subclasses = []
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def __init_subclass__(cls, **kwargs):
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super().__init_subclass__(**kwargs)
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cls.subclasses.append(cls)
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One should note that this also works nicely as a mixin class.
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Trait descriptors
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-----------------
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There are many designs of Python descriptors in the wild which, for
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example, check boundaries of values. Often those "traits" need some support
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of a metaclass to work. This is how this would look like with this
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PEP::
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class Trait:
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def __get__(self, instance, owner):
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return instance.__dict__[self.key]
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def __set__(self, instance, value):
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instance.__dict__[self.key] = value
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def __init_descriptor__(self, owner, name):
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self.key = name
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class Int(Trait):
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def __set__(self, instance, value):
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# some boundary check code here
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super().__set__(instance, value)
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Rejected Design Options
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=======================
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Calling the hook on the class itself
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------------------------------------
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Adding an ``__autodecorate__`` hook that would be called on the class
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itself was the proposed idea of PEP 422. Most examples work the same
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way or even better if the hook is called on the subclass. In general,
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it is much easier to explicitly call the hook on the class in which it
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is defined (to opt-in to such a behavior) than to opt-out, meaning
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that one does not want the hook to be called on the class it is
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defined in.
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This becomes most evident if the class in question is designed as a
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mixin: it is very unlikely that the code of the mixin is to be
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executed for the mixin class itself, as it is not supposed to be a
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complete class on its own.
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The original proposal also made major changes in the class
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initialization process, rendering it impossible to back-port the
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2016-02-06 00:26:52 -05:00
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proposal to older Python versions.
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2015-02-27 14:07:44 -05:00
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Other variants of calling the hook
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----------------------------------
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Other names for the hook were presented, namely ``__decorate__`` or
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``__autodecorate__``. This proposal opts for ``__init_subclass__`` as
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it is very close to the ``__init__`` method, just for the subclass,
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while it is not very close to decorators, as it does not return the
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class.
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Requiring an explicit decorator on ``__init_subclass__``
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--------------------------------------------------------
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One could require the explicit use of ``@classmethod`` on the
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``__init_subclass__`` decorator. It was made implicit since there's no
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sensible interpretation for leaving it out, and that case would need
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to be detected anyway in order to give a useful error message.
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This decision was reinforced after noticing that the user experience of
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defining ``__prepare__`` and forgetting the ``@classmethod`` method
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decorator is singularly incomprehensible (particularly since PEP 3115
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documents it as an ordinary method, and the current documentation doesn't
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explicitly say anything one way or the other).
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2016-02-06 00:26:52 -05:00
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Defining arbitrary namespaces
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-----------------------------
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PEP 422 defined a generic way to add arbitrary namespaces for class
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definitions. This approach is much more flexible than just leaving
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the definition order in a tuple. The ``__prepare__`` method in a metaclass
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supports exactly this behavior. But given that effectively
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the only use cases that could be found out in the wild were the
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``OrderedDict`` way of determining the attribute order, it seemed
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reasonable to only support this special case.
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The metaclass described in this PEP has been designed to be very simple
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such that it could be reasonably made the default metaclass. This was
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especially important when designing the attribute order functionality:
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This was a highly demanded feature and has been enabled through the
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``__prepare__`` method of metaclasses. This method can be abused in
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very weird ways, making it hard to correctly maintain this feature in
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CPython. This is why it has been proposed to deprecated this feature,
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and instead use ``OrderedDict`` as the standard namespace, supporting
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the most important feature while dropping most of the complexity. But
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this would have meant that ``OrderedDict`` becomes a language builtin
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like dict and set, and not just a standard library class. The choice
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of the ``__attribute_order__`` tuple is a much simpler solution to the
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problem.
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A more ``__new__``-like hook
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----------------------------
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In PEP 422 the hook worked more like the ``__new__`` method than the
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``__init__`` method, meaning that it returned a class instead of
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modifying one. This allows a bit more flexibility, but at the cost
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of much harder implementation and undesired side effects.
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History
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=======
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This used to be a competing proposal to PEP 422 by Nick Coughlan and
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|
Daniel Urban. It shares both most of the PEP text and proposed code, but
|
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has major differences in how to achieve its goals. In the meantime, PEP 422
|
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has been withdrawn favouring this approach.
|
2015-02-27 14:07:44 -05:00
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References
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|
==========
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.. _published code:
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|
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2012-June/119878.html
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|
.. _more than 10 years ago:
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|
|
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2001-November/018651.html
|
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|
.. _Zope's ExtensionClass:
|
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|
|
http://docs.zope.org/zope_secrets/extensionclass.html
|
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|
.. _uploaded to PyPI:
|
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|
|
https://pypi.python.org/pypi/metaclass
|
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Copyright
|
|
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|
|
=========
|
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|
This document has been placed in the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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