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Suppose I have a Python class that I want to add an extra property to.

Is there any difference between

import path.MyClass
MyClass.foo = bar

and using something like :

import path.MyClass
setattr(MyClass, 'foo', bar)

?

If not, why do people seem to do the second rather than the first? (Eg. here http://concisionandconcinnity.blogspot.com/2008/10/chaining-monkey-patches-in-python.html )

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Why not update you class's definition with the additional method? Why do all this "magical" stuff when you can simply edit the class definition? – S.Lott Jun 8 at 12:28
In my particular problem when I asked this, the class came from a library that we didn't want to change; and we couldn't subclass it. Though agree in general. – interstar Jun 9 at 9:50

1 Answer

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The statements are equivalent, but setattr might be used because it's the most dynamic choice of the two (with setattr you can use a variable for the attribute name.)

See: http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html#setattr

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Agreed. In particular, this would be required the way patching was performed in the OP's referred-to blog entry - the name of the method was not known by the innards of the monkeypatch method. – Blair Conrad Jun 8 at 12:05
thanks. But I updated the question because I still don't see that one is more dynamic than the other – interstar Jun 8 at 12:09
ah ... no, I see what you mean ... sorry .. doh! – interstar Jun 8 at 12:10

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