vote up 1 vote down star

Hello. I've found a strange issue with subclassing and dictionary updates in New-Style Classes:

Python 2.6.2 (r262:71605, Apr 14 2009, 22:40:02) [MSC v.1500 32 bit (Intel)] on
win32
>>> class a(object):
...     def __init__(self, props={}):
...             self.props = props
...
>>> class b(a):
...     def __init__(self, val = None):
...             super(b, self).__init__()
...             self.props.update({'arg': val})
...
>>> class c(b):
...     def __init__(self, val):
...             super(c, self).__init__(val)
...
>>> b_inst = b(2)
>>> b_inst.props
{'arg': 2}
>>> c_inst = c(3)
>>> c_inst.props
{'arg': 3}
>>> b_inst.props
{'arg': 3}
>>>

In debug, in second call (c(3)) you can see that within a constructor self.props is already equal to {'arg': 2}, and when b constructor is called after that, it becomes {'arg': 3} for both objects!

also, the order of constructors calling is:

  a, b    # for b(2)
  c, a, b # for c(3)

If you'll change self.props.update() with self.props = {'arg': val} in b counstructor, everything will be ok, and will act as expected

But I really need to update this property, not to replace

flag
Is this an inheritance problem, or a "default parameter values are evaluated ONCE" problem? – Hank Gay Sep 2 at 14:04
Thank you, replacing with {} with None helped me. – shaman.sir Sep 2 at 14:10
Thank you, Hank, I've renamed the question so – shaman.sir Sep 2 at 14:11
See also stackoverflow.com/questions/1132941/… – Stefano Borini Sep 2 at 14:24
It is funny, when you think that you've almost got this nice language, to find that the situations are thinking opposite. – shaman.sir Sep 2 at 19:28

3 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

props should not have a default value like that. Do this instead:

class a(object):
    def __init__(self, props=None):
        if props is None:
            props = {}
        self.props = props

This is a common python "gotcha".

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

The short version: Do this:

class a(object):
    def __init__(self, props=None):
        self.props = props if props is not None else {}

class b(a):
    def __init__(self, val = None):
        super(b, self).__init__()
        self.props.update({'arg': val})

class c(b):
    def __init__(self, val):
    super(c, self).__init__(val)

The long version:

The function definition is evaluated exactly once, so every time you call it the same default argument is used. For this to work like you expected, the default arguments would have to be evaluated every time a function is called. But instead Python generates a function object once and adds the defaults to the object ( as func_obj.func_defaults )

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Your problem is in this line:

def __init__(self, props={}):

{} is an mutable type. And in python default argument values are only evaluated once. That means all your instances are sharing the same dictionary object!

To fix this change it to:

class a(object):
    def __init__(self, props=None):
        if is None:
            props = {}
        self.props = props
link|flag
Don't do "if not props", a boolean false value can break that line – Gorgapor Sep 2 at 14:11
@Gorgapor, You are right is None is more accurate. I'll fix my answer. – Nadia Alramli Sep 2 at 14:12

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.