I\'m collecting instances using the following code:
class Hand():
instances = []
def __init__(self):
Hand.instances.append(self)
self
foo.__dict__
will have "hand1
" and "hand2
" keys (among others). But you're probably going about this the wrong way. If the names are significant, you should use them as explicit indices in Foo
(or somewhere).
e.g.
class Foo():
def __init__(self):
self.hands = {}
def insty(self):
self.hands['hand1'] = Hand()
self.hands['hand2'] = Hand()
foo = Foo()
means that the variable foo
just points to the object returned by Foo()
, there's no concept of name here.
If you mean how to get hand1
from the instance you assigned to self.hand1
, the answer is that you can't. When you do self.hand1 = Hand()
, you tell the Foo object it has a Hand, but the Hand object has no knowledge that it has been assigned to a Foo. You could do this:
h = Hand()
self.bob = h
self.larry = h
Now what is the "name" of that Hand supposed to be? You assigned the same hand to both "bob" and "larry", so there's no way it can have a single unique name.
If you want to have a name for each hand, you need to tell the hand what name you want to give it. You would have to modify your Hand code to allow you to pass a name to the constructor, then create the Hand with Hand("some name")
.
You can of course give the hands "names" by assigning attributes on them:
self.hand1 = Hand()
self.hand1.name = "hand 1"
. . . but these names are not special or "automatic" in any way.
The bottom line is that if you want something to have a name, you need to decide how to handle that name. You need write your own code that gives it its name, and your own code that retrieves its name.
I don't know if this would solve your problem or not. I needed to get instance names in order to do clear error reporting. Everywhere I looked, folks said "variables don't have names! The name is just a pointer to the thing!"
But it turns out that getting instance names in python is pretty straightforward. Here's how I did it:
import gc
def instance_names(self):
referrers = gc.get_referrers(self)
result = []
dict_of_things = {}
for item in referrers:
if isinstance(item, dict):
dict_of_things = item
for k, v in dict_of_things.items():
if v == self:
result.append(k)
if not result:
result = ['unnamed instance']
return result