0

I have a class with class and instance attributes with the same name. Is there a way to return their respected value based on the context they are accessed?

Example:

class A:
    b = 'test'
    @property
    def b(self):
        return 'not test'

Desired Results:

>>> A().b
'not test'
>>> A.b
'test'

Actual Results:

>>> A().b
'not test'
>>> A.b
<property object at 0x03ADC640>
3
  • 1
    you named your property that, which replaced your previous assignment to b. You could use an actual instance attribute Jul 10, 2020 at 20:09
  • Is there a reason not to use different names for different attributes?
    – zvone
    Jul 10, 2020 at 20:48
  • My current implementation uses different names (b for the instance variable and b_ for the class variable). Jul 10, 2020 at 21:06

2 Answers 2

1

I have no idea why you want that, but this would work:

class ClassWithB(type):
    @property
    def b(self):
        return 'test'


class A(metaclass=ClassWithB):
    @property
    def b(self):
        return 'not test'

It behaves like this:

>>> A.b
'test'
>>> A().b
'not test'

You could also use e.g. a descriptor:

class B:
    def __get__(self, obj, type_=None):
        if obj is None:
            return 'test'
        else:
            return 'not test'

class A:
    b = B()
0

No - the method shadows the instance - see this for more information https://stackoverflow.com/a/12949375/13085236

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