The typesafe enum pattern which was used in Java pre-JDK 5 has a number of advantages. Much like in Alexandru's answer, you create a class and class level fields are the enum values; however, the enum values are instances of the class rather than small integers. This has the advantage that your enum values don't inadvertently compare equal to small integers, you can control how they're printed, add arbitrary methods if that's useful and make assertions using isinstance:
class Animal:
def __init_ _(self, _init__(self, name):
self.name = name
def _ _str_ _(self):
_str__(self):
return self.name
def __repr_ _(self):
_repr__(self):
return "<Animal: %s>" % self
Animal.DOG = Animal("dog")
Animal.CAT = Animal("cat")
>>> x = Animal.DOG
>>> x
<Animal: dog>
>>> x == 1
False
