How can I get the parent class(es) of a Python class?
9 Answers
Use the following attribute:
cls.__bases__
From the docs:
The tuple of base classes of a class object.
Example:
>>> str.__bases__
(<type 'basestring'>,)
Another example:
>>> class A(object):
... pass
...
>>> class B(object):
... pass
...
>>> class C(A, B):
... pass
...
>>> C.__bases__
(<class '__main__.A'>, <class '__main__.B'>)
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16To get bases of an instantiated object do
type(C()).__bases__
as mentioned further below Jan 5, 2020 at 15:55
If you want all the ancestors rather than just the immediate ones, use inspect.getmro
:
import inspect
print inspect.getmro(cls)
Usefully, this gives you all ancestor classes in the "method resolution order" -- i.e. the order in which the ancestors will be checked when resolving a method (or, actually, any other attribute -- methods and other attributes live in the same namespace in Python, after all;-).
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53
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@naught101, plz turn it into a full answer. I almost missed it, and so will, I think lots of other people. Oct 4, 2018 at 13:33
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2
The fastest way to get all parents, and in order, is to just use the __mro__
built-in.
For instance, repr(YOUR_CLASS.__mro__)
.
The following:
import getpass
getpass.GetPassWarning.__mro__
...outputs, in order:
(<class 'getpass.GetPassWarning'>, <type 'exceptions.UserWarning'>, <type 'exceptions.Warning'>, <type 'exceptions.Exception'>, <type 'exceptions.BaseException'>, <type 'object'>)
There you have it. The "best" answer may have more votes but this is so much simpler than some convoluted for
loop, looking into __bases__
one class at a time, not to mention when a class extends two or more parent classes. Importing and using inspect
just clouds the scope unnecessarily.
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@John Smith stackoverflow.com/users/139885/john-smith, I hope you see this answer. If you like it, please let me know with an upvote!– PyTisMar 26, 2019 at 8:43
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2In fact,
inspect.getmro
just calls__mro__
on object, as you can see in github.com/python/cpython/blob/… . Usinggetmro
produces cleaner and more readable code. Though skipping a function call is indeed faster.– tna0yApr 4, 2019 at 12:31 -
How can I test if a parent class of an instance is the one I'm expecting? I've tried
isinstance(pre_switch.__class__.__mro__[1], nengo.base.Process)
but it returnsFalse
. Oct 1, 2020 at 9:14 -
1I'm finding this helpful with climbing the hierarchy of my Sqlalchemy joined table inheritance orm models. Super simple and exactly what I was looking for. Apr 26, 2021 at 4:43
New-style classes have an mro
method you can call which returns a list of parent classes in method resolution order.
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What counts as a new-style class? It seems I can use this with Django models, but anything simply inheriting from
object
doesn't seem to respond tomro
. Jun 15, 2015 at 14:21 -
1considering an object
x
, we can get the method resolution order with the calltype(x).mro()
we can consider ifx
hasClassX
as a base class with:ClassX in type(x).mro()
Jan 15, 2017 at 1:11
Use bases if you just want to get the parents, use __mro__
(as pointed out by @naught101) for getting the method resolution order (so to know in which order the init's were executed).
Bases (and first getting the class for an existing object):
>>> some_object = "some_text"
>>> some_object.__class__.__bases__
(object,)
For mro in recent Python versions:
>>> some_object = "some_text"
>>> some_object.__class__.__mro__
(str, object)
Obviously, when you already have a class definition, you can just call __mro__
on that directly:
>>> class A(): pass
>>> A.__mro__
(__main__.A, object)
This funciton will print the all the classes of an object, while in each step the next object will the left most parent.
def print_root_left(class_):
while True:
print(class_)
# Check there if are no bases then we have reached the root class
if not class_.__bases__:
break
class_=class_.__bases__[0] # use the left most parent
example = "hello"
print_root_left(example.__class__)
I've already answered this once, but you could also use "pip3 install pytis" and use/take a look at, the "getip" program, written in Python.
You may find it's code here: https://github.com/PyTis/PyTis/blob/development/src/pytis/getip.py
I'm the author of the linked repository.
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When linking to your own site or content (or content that you are affiliated with), you must disclose your affiliation in the answer in order for it not to be considered spam. Having the same text in your username as the URL or mentioning it in your profile is not considered sufficient disclosure under Stack Exchange policy. Make sure to do this for all the answers where you've linked to a library you're affiliated with.– cigienJan 15 at 14:05
If you have a variable and want to get its class and parent classes use type() method which will give class for a variable
val="happy coding"
print(type(val).__mro__)
Output:
(<class 'str'>, <class 'object'>)