Be aware that @classmethod
-decorated functions will pass all the tests in other answers. Do you want these to be considered 'instance methods'? Maybe it's just semantics, but they by definition operate on the class, not the spawned instance. I am not sure about the cases where hasmethod2 (my proposed solution) fails, but at least it can be wary of class methods:
import inspect
import types
def hasmethod(obj, name):
return hasattr(obj, name) and type(getattr(obj, name)) == types.MethodType
def hasmethod2(obj, name):
try:
attr = getattr(obj, name)
return not inspect.isclass(attr.__self__)
except AttributeError:
return False
class Test(object):
testdata = 123
def testmethod(self):
pass
@classmethod
def testmethod2(cls):
pass
# Returns True. This may be undesired depending on your definition of 'instance method'
hasmethod(Test(), 'testmethod2')
# Returns False
hasmethod2(Test(), 'testmethod2')
It works because __self__
is bound to the primary calling argument (class instance for classmethod, object instance for normal attributes, module or nothing for various built-ins). Thus, checking for the existence of __self__
and that __self__
is not a class rules out non-function attributes and classmethods, respectively.