209 lines
6.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
209 lines
6.1 KiB
ReStructuredText
PEP: 562
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Title: Module __getattr__ and __dir__
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Author: Ivan Levkivskyi <levkivskyi@gmail.com>
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Status: Final
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 09-Sep-2017
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Python-Version: 3.7
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Post-History: 09-Sep-2017
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Resolution: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2017-December/151033.html
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Abstract
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========
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It is proposed to support ``__getattr__`` and ``__dir__`` function defined
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on modules to provide basic customization of module attribute access.
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Rationale
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=========
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It is sometimes convenient to customize or otherwise have control over
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access to module attributes. A typical example is managing deprecation
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warnings. Typical workarounds are assigning ``__class__`` of a module object
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to a custom subclass of ``types.ModuleType`` or replacing the ``sys.modules``
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item with a custom wrapper instance. It would be convenient to simplify this
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procedure by recognizing ``__getattr__`` defined directly in a module that
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would act like a normal ``__getattr__`` method, except that it will be defined
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on module *instances*. For example::
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# lib.py
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from warnings import warn
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deprecated_names = ["old_function", ...]
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def _deprecated_old_function(arg, other):
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...
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def __getattr__(name):
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if name in deprecated_names:
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warn(f"{name} is deprecated", DeprecationWarning)
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return globals()[f"_deprecated_{name}"]
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raise AttributeError(f"module {__name__!r} has no attribute {name!r}")
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# main.py
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from lib import old_function # Works, but emits the warning
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Another widespread use case for ``__getattr__`` would be lazy submodule
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imports. Consider a simple example::
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# lib/__init__.py
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import importlib
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__all__ = ['submod', ...]
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def __getattr__(name):
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if name in __all__:
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return importlib.import_module("." + name, __name__)
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raise AttributeError(f"module {__name__!r} has no attribute {name!r}")
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# lib/submod.py
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print("Submodule loaded")
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class HeavyClass:
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...
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# main.py
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import lib
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lib.submod.HeavyClass # prints "Submodule loaded"
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There is a related proposal :pep:`549` that proposes to support instance
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properties for a similar functionality. The difference is this PEP proposes
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a faster and simpler mechanism, but provides more basic customization.
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An additional motivation for this proposal is that :pep:`484` already defines
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the use of module ``__getattr__`` for this purpose in Python stub files,
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see :pep:`484#stub-files`.
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In addition, to allow modifying result of a ``dir()`` call on a module
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to show deprecated and other dynamically generated attributes, it is
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proposed to support module level ``__dir__`` function. For example::
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# lib.py
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deprecated_names = ["old_function", ...]
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__all__ = ["new_function_one", "new_function_two", ...]
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def new_function_one(arg, other):
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...
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def new_function_two(arg, other):
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...
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def __dir__():
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return sorted(__all__ + deprecated_names)
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# main.py
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import lib
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dir(lib) # prints ["new_function_one", "new_function_two", "old_function", ...]
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Specification
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=============
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The ``__getattr__`` function at the module level should accept one argument
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which is the name of an attribute and return the computed value or raise
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an ``AttributeError``::
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def __getattr__(name: str) -> Any: ...
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If an attribute is not found on a module object through the normal lookup
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(i.e. ``object.__getattribute__``), then ``__getattr__`` is searched in
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the module ``__dict__`` before raising an ``AttributeError``. If found, it is
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called with the attribute name and the result is returned. Looking up a name
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as a module global will bypass module ``__getattr__``. This is intentional,
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otherwise calling ``__getattr__`` for builtins will significantly harm
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performance.
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The ``__dir__`` function should accept no arguments, and return
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a list of strings that represents the names accessible on module::
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def __dir__() -> List[str]: ...
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If present, this function overrides the standard ``dir()`` search on
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a module.
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The reference implementation for this PEP can be found in [2]_.
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Backwards compatibility and impact on performance
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=================================================
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This PEP may break code that uses module level (global) names ``__getattr__``
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and ``__dir__``. (But the language reference explicitly reserves *all*
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undocumented dunder names, and allows "breakage without warning"; see [3]_.)
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The performance implications of this PEP are minimal, since ``__getattr__``
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is called only for missing attributes.
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Some tools that perform module attributes discovery might not expect
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``__getattr__``. This problem is not new however, since it is already possible
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to replace a module with a module subclass with overridden ``__getattr__`` and
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``__dir__``, but with this PEP such problems can occur more often.
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Discussion
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==========
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Note that the use of module ``__getattr__`` requires care to keep the referred
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objects pickleable. For example, the ``__name__`` attribute of a function
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should correspond to the name with which it is accessible via
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``__getattr__``::
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def keep_pickleable(func):
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func.__name__ = func.__name__.replace('_deprecated_', '')
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func.__qualname__ = func.__qualname__.replace('_deprecated_', '')
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return func
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@keep_pickleable
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def _deprecated_old_function(arg, other):
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...
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One should be also careful to avoid recursion as one would do with
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a class level ``__getattr__``.
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To use a module global with triggering ``__getattr__`` (for example if one
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wants to use a lazy loaded submodule) one can access it as::
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sys.modules[__name__].some_global
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or as::
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from . import some_global
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Note that the latter sets the module attribute, thus ``__getattr__`` will be
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called only once.
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References
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==========
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.. [2] The reference implementation
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(https://github.com/ilevkivskyi/cpython/pull/3/files)
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.. [3] Reserved classes of identifiers
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(https://docs.python.org/3/reference/lexical_analysis.html#reserved-classes-of-identifiers)
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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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