Under what circumstances is it possible, and when is it impossible, to assign to an instance's __class__
attribute in Python?
Error messages such as TypeError: __class__ assignment: only for heap types
don't really do it for me.
Under what circumstances is it possible, and when is it impossible, to assign to an instance's __class__
attribute in Python?
Error messages such as TypeError: __class__ assignment: only for heap types
don't really do it for me.
You can only assign to the __class__
attribute of an instance of a user-defined class (i.e. defined using the class
keyword), and the new value must also be a user-defined class. Whether the classes are new-style or old-style does not matter. (You can't mix them, though. You can't turn an old-style class instance into a new-style class instance.) See also this issue in the Python bug tracker, which also complains that the error message is somewhat hard to understand.
Just to add what Rafe said in the above comment: Never do this in production.
__slots__
also makes a difference: "X deallocator differs from Y" from instance_with_slots.__class__ = ClassWithoutSlots
and instance_without_slots.__class__ = ClassWithSlots
a.__class__ = B.__class__
when I obviously should have been doing a.__class__ = B
Jan 29, 2011 at 17:54
matplotlib
and django
do this in production, according to the above comments
Jun 6, 2016 at 10:55
__class__
could have been made a read-only attribute. Saying that these mature and exceptionally well supported projects are "doing it wrong" because they do something that we advise newcomers against on stackoverflow is like saying that engineers are doing it wrong because they're not using sliderules, or space shuttle welders doing it wrong because they're not using soldering irons.