Python is the language I know the most, and strangely I still don\'t know why I\'m typing \"self\" and not \"this\" like in Java or PHP.
I know that Python is older
The primary inspiration was Modula-3, which Guido was introduced to at DEC:
the Modula-3 final report was being written there at about the same time. What I learned there showed up in Python's exception handling, modules, and the fact that methods explicitly contain “self” in their parameter list.
-- Guido, Linux Journal Interviews Guido van Rossum
Check the history of Python for user defined classes:
Instead, one simply defines a function whose first argument corresponds to the instance, which by convention is named "self." For example:
def spam(self,y):
print self.x, y
This approach resembles something I had seen in Modula-3, which had already provided me with the syntax for import and exception handling.
It's a choice as good as any other. You might ask why C++, Java, and C# chose "this" just as easily.
With respect to python, there is nothing special about self
. You can use this
instead if you wanted:
Here's an example:
>>> class A(object):
... def __init__(this):
... this.x = 3
...
>>> a = A()
>>> a.x
3
Although you could name it whatever you want, self
is the convention for the first argument of a class function. Check out paragraph 5 of section 9.4 in the python documentation, which says:
Often, the first argument of a method is called self. This is nothing more than a convention: the name self has absolutely no special meaning to Python. Note, however, that by not following the convention your code may be less readable to other Python programmers, and it is also conceivable that a class browser program might be written that relies upon such a convention.
As for the convention, it started out in Smalltalk, but is also used in Object Pascal, Python, Ruby, and Objective-C. This answer has a great explanation.
self
is not a keyword (*).
self
represents by convention the address of the current object
You can get more info on self
here.
Why not this
? well it is a convention for a name. You can use this
for your code if you like it better.
(*) This answer has been ported and merged here from a question asking why 'self' instead of 'this' keyword
. As the clarification in this first line could be useful for others I keep it here.
Python follows Smalltalk's footsteps in the aspect - self is used in Smalltalk as well. I guess the real question should be 'why did Bjarne decide to use this
in C++'...
Smalltalk, which predates Java of course.