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I have two questions regarding the behavior of running the below code. Why is __new__ even being called without instantiating an object? I thought __new__ controlled the creation of a new instance. Next, why does delattr raise an AttributeError when hasattr returns True for size?

class ShapeBase(type):

  def __new__(cls, name, bases, attrs):
    rv = super(ShapeBase, cls).__new__(cls, name, bases, attrs)
    parents = [base for base in bases if isinstance(base, ShapeBase)]

    # don't do anything unless this is a subclass of Shape
    if not parents:
      return rv

    print hasattr(rv, 'altitude') # prints True
    print rv.altitude             # prints 7
    del rv.altitude               # deletes altitude from rv

    print hasattr(rv, 'size')     # prints True
    print rv.size                 # prints 5
    delattr(rv, 'size')           # raises AttributeError                    

    return rv

class Shape(object):
  __metaclass__ = ShapeBase
  size = 5

class Triangle(Shape):
  altitude = 7
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  • Your comment "don't do anything unless this is a subclass of Shape" is misleading, because what you're doing, is you're checking wheter it inherits a class with ShapeBase as metaclass. As it is, Shape is "not a subclass of Shape" (even though issubclass(Shape, Shape) == True), while Triangle is. So, the code is maybe as it should be, but it would be less confusing if the comment wasn't there at all. Jul 15, 2011 at 13:48

2 Answers 2

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__new__ of a metaclass controls the instantiation of a new class, not a new instance of that class. So, when you create the class Shape with ShapeBase as the metaclass, ShapeBase.__new__ is invoked.

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For the second question delattr(rv, 'size') (and del rv.size) is failing because the attribute size is a class attribute not an instance attribute which mean is part of the class __dict__ not the instance __dict__.

And the hasattr normally will return True because it search for an attribute in all the parent classes of the object passed to it.

As for why your metaclass __new__ is called when the class body is evaluated think of it like this :

If you create an instance of a class the class __new__ will be called when you create the instance, yes ? so the same should apply on class , a metaclass is a class of a class so the __new__ will be called when you create the class.

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    Thanks a lot. I upvoted both answers but marked yours as correct since it came first and answered both questions. Jul 15, 2011 at 13:37

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