Inspect python class attributes

感情迁移 提交于 2019-11-26 22:21:17

问题


I need a way to inspect a class so I can safely identify which attributes are user-defined class attributes. The problem is that functions like dir(), inspect.getmembers() and friends return all class attributes including the pre-defined ones like: __class__, __doc__, __dict__, __hash__. This is of course understandable, and one could argue that I could just make a list of named members to ignore, but unfortunately these pre-defined attributes are bound to change with different versions of Python therefore making my project volnerable to changed in the python project - and I don't like that.

example:

>>> class A:
...   a=10
...   b=20
...   def __init__(self):
...     self.c=30
>>> dir(A)
['__doc__', '__init__', '__module__', 'a', 'b']
>>> get_user_attributes(A)
['a','b']

In the example above I want a safe way to retrieve only the user-defined class attributes ['a','b'] not 'c' as it is an instance attribute. So my question is... Can anyone help me with the above fictive function get_user_attributes(cls)?

P.S. I have spent some time trying to solve the problem by parsing the class in AST level which would be very easy. But I can't find a way to convert already parsed objects to an AST node tree. I guess all AST info is discarded once a class has been compiled into bytecode.

Best regards Jakob


回答1:


Below is the hard way. Here's the easy way. Don't know why it didn't occur to me sooner.

import inspect

def get_user_attributes(cls):
    boring = dir(type('dummy', (object,), {}))
    return [item
            for item in inspect.getmembers(cls)
            if item[0] not in boring]

Here's a start

def get_user_attributes(cls):
    boring = dir(type('dummy', (object,), {}))
    attrs = {}
    bases = reversed(inspect.getmro(cls))   
    for base in bases:
        if hasattr(base, '__dict__'):
            attrs.update(base.__dict__)
        elif hasattr(base, '__slots__'):
            if hasattr(base, base.__slots__[0]): 
                # We're dealing with a non-string sequence or one char string
                for item in base.__slots__:
                    attrs[item] = getattr(base, item)
            else: 
                # We're dealing with a single identifier as a string
                attrs[base.__slots__] = getattr(base, base.__slots__)
    for key in boring:
        del attrs['key']  # we can be sure it will be present so no need to guard this
    return attrs

This should be fairly robust. Essentially, it works by getting the attributes that are on a default subclass of object to ignore. It then gets the mro of the class that's passed to it and traverses it in reverse order so that subclass keys can overwrite superclass keys. It returns a dictionary of key-value pairs. If you want a list of key, value tuples like in inspect.getmembers then just return either attrs.items() or list(attrs.items()) in Python 3.

If you don't actually want to traverse the mro and just want attributes defined directly on the subclass then it's easier:

def get_user_attributes(cls):
    boring = dir(type('dummy', (object,), {}))
    if hasattr(cls, '__dict__'):
        attrs = cls.__dict__.copy()
    elif hasattr(cls, '__slots__'):
        if hasattr(base, base.__slots__[0]): 
            # We're dealing with a non-string sequence or one char string
            for item in base.__slots__:
                attrs[item] = getattr(base, item)
            else: 
                # We're dealing with a single identifier as a string
                attrs[base.__slots__] = getattr(base, base.__slots__)
    for key in boring:
        del attrs['key']  # we can be sure it will be present so no need to guard this
    return attrs



回答2:


Double underscores on both ends of 'special attributes' have been a part of python before 2.0. It would be very unlikely that they would change that any time in the near future.

class Foo(object):
  a = 1
  b = 2

def get_attrs(klass):
  return [k for k in klass.__dict__.keys()
            if not k.startswith('__')
            and not k.endswith('__')]

print get_attrs(Foo)

['a', 'b']




回答3:


Thanks aaronasterling, you gave me the expression i needed :-) My final class attribute inspector function looks like this:

def get_user_attributes(cls,exclude_methods=True):
  base_attrs = dir(type('dummy', (object,), {}))
  this_cls_attrs = dir(cls)
  res = []
  for attr in this_cls_attrs:
    if base_attrs.count(attr) or (callable(getattr(cls,attr)) and exclude_methods):
      continue
    res += [attr]
  return res

Either return class attribute variabels only (exclude_methods=True) or also retrieve the methods. My initial tests og the above function supports both old and new-style python classes.

/ Jakob




回答4:


If you use new style classes, could you simply subtract the attributes of the parent class?

class A(object):
    a = 10
    b = 20
    #...

def get_attrs(Foo):
    return [k for k in dir(Foo) if k not in dir(super(Foo))]

Edit: Not quite. __dict__,__module__ and __weakref__ appear when inheriting from object, but aren't there in object itself. You could special case these--I doubt they'd change very often.




回答5:


Sorry for necro-bumping the thread. I'm surprised that there's still no simple function (or a library) to handle such common usage as of 2019.

I'd like to thank aaronasterling for the idea. Actually, set container provides a more straightforward way to express it:

class dummy:    pass

def abridged_set_of_user_attributes(obj):
    return set(dir(obj))-set(dir(dummy))

def abridged_list_of_user_attributes(obj):
    return list(abridged_set_of_user_attributes(obj))

The original solution using list comprehension is actually two level of loops because there are two in keyword compounded, despite having only one for keyword made it look like less work than it is.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/4241171/inspect-python-class-attributes

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