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I am learning OOP, so my question on the two statements below probably seems very basic to many, but I just want to check in case I am using Python/OO lingo in the wrong way:

- You must explicitly define 'self' as the first parameter in every class method.

- Python's explicit requirement of self as the first parameter of methods defined in classes, makes it so that it's clear to people what the difference between instance and static methods are.

If the statements are correct concerning the 'self' keyword, is it correct of me to infer that, either as a parameter in method definitions or as a prefix to variables; the presence of the word 'self' commonly indicates that a method or variable is static, whereas the absence of the word 'self' usually indicates that the method or variable is an instance method or variable?
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2 Answers 2

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The name of the first parameter is not syntactically important. It's self for normal methods by convention, but that's not enforced.

What is syntactically important is how the method is constructed. A method is a normal method and will receive the instance it's called on as its first argument unless converted into a class method or static method by the classmethod or staticmethod built in functions.

A class method receives the class as its first argument, which by convention is named cls. Although because class methods are less common than normal methods, I've seen more deviations from that convention than I have for normal methods. klass is not totally uncommon, and sometimes people are careless and use self out of habit.

A static method does not receive any automatic arguments.

class ExampleClass(object):

    def sample_instance_method(self):
        # this is a normal instance method
        pass

    @classmethod
    def sample_class_method(cls):
        # this is a class method, and will not receive the individual instance if called on one
        pass

    @staticmethod
    def sample_static_method():
        # this is a static method, and will not receive either the instance or the class when called
        pass
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No, its the other way round.

But I can see why the doubt, these statements are confusing: you put self as first argument in instance methods, and you don't put it in static methods.

Note that although there is no need in naming that first parameter self, it is better to follow that convention as it is clearer to the reader.

Also, don't name selfthe first parameter in a static method, it is possible, yes, but you will for sure confuse the reader.

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