51

How do I go about creating a list of objects (class instances) in Python?

Or is this a result of bad design? I need this cause I have different objects and I need to handle them at a later stage, so I would just keep on adding them to a list and call them later.

3
  • 2
    Do you mean a list of type objects ([type(x), ... ]) or instances of a class ([1, 2, 3])?
    – Skurmedel
    Jul 5, 2010 at 21:12
  • 4
    @Skurmedel: class instances. I mentioned it specifically in the question :)
    – user225312
    Jul 6, 2010 at 5:07
  • @Alfred: hehe, I just find class instances a bit ambiguous, but I see what you mean now through the selected answer :P
    – Skurmedel
    Jul 6, 2010 at 11:29

8 Answers 8

95

Storing a list of object instances is very simple

class MyClass(object):
    def __init__(self, number):
        self.number = number

my_objects = []

for i in range(100):
    my_objects.append(MyClass(i))

# Print the number attribute of each instance

for obj in my_objects:
    print(obj.number)
4
  • Where you pass "object" in the first line, is that an actual object or just a number signifying that object instance's number? If I were to write my_objects(1), I would call to the first object, but I don't think the 1 being passed in is an object. This might be entirely orthogonal to the educational purposes of the original response, but it would help me on a different, related topic I'm struggling with. Thanks. Aug 4, 2017 at 16:31
  • 2
    T'was hoping there was a shiny special syntax for this :( Mar 20, 2018 at 12:53
  • @Brad English, that indicates that MyClass inherits the properties of an object May 26, 2018 at 23:10
  • 1
    The i in MyClass (i) refers to the number in the class's __init__ function. May 26, 2018 at 23:17
26

You can create a list of objects in one line using a list comprehension.

class MyClass(object): pass

objs = [MyClass() for i in range(10)]

print(objs)
4
  • 1
    This is really clean syntax.
    – Galaxy
    Apr 22, 2020 at 3:42
  • 4
    Slight detail: objs = [MyClass(i) for i in range(10)]
    – Brainless
    Sep 4, 2020 at 21:33
  • @Brainless, in this answer, the MyClass() initializer does not take an argument (in one of the other answers, it does...).
    – cryptoplex
    Apr 29 at 14:18
  • The usual python idiom is to use _ for loop variables that aren't referenced in the loop body (i.e. objs = [MyClass() for _ in range(10)])
    – Martin CR
    Jul 5 at 11:09
5

The Python Tutorial discusses how to use lists.

Storing a list of classes is no different than storing any other objects.

def MyClass(object):
    pass

my_types = [str, int, float, MyClass]
4

In Python, the name of the class refers to the class instance. Consider:

class A: pass
class B: pass
class C: pass

lst = [A, B, C]

# instantiate second class
b_instance = lst[1]()
print b_instance
2

I have some hacky answers that are likely to be terrible... but I have very little experience at this point.

a way:

class myClass():
    myInstances = []
    def __init__(self, myStr01, myStr02):
        self.myStr01 = myStr01
        self.myStr02 = myStr02
        self.__class__.myInstances.append(self)

myObj01 = myClass("Foo", "Bar")
myObj02 = myClass("FooBar",  "Baz")

for thisObj in myClass.myInstances:
    print(thisObj.myStr01)
    print(thisObj.myStr02)

A hack way to get this done:

import sys
class myClass():
    def __init__(self, myStr01, myStr02):
        self.myStr01 = myStr01
        self.myStr02 = myStr02

myObj01 = myClass("Foo", "Bar")
myObj02 = myClass("FooBar",  "Baz")

myInstances = []
myLocals = str(locals()).split("'")
thisStep = 0
for thisLocalsLine in myLocals:
    thisStep += 1
    if "myClass object at" in thisLocalsLine:
        print(thisLocalsLine)
        print(myLocals[(thisStep - 2)])
        #myInstances.append(myLocals[(thisStep - 2)])
        print(myInstances)
        myInstances.append(getattr(sys.modules[__name__], myLocals[(thisStep - 2)]))

for thisObj in myInstances:
    print(thisObj.myStr01)
    print(thisObj.myStr02)

Another more 'clever' hack:

import sys
class myClass():
    def __init__(self, myStr01, myStr02):
        self.myStr01 = myStr01
        self.myStr02 = myStr02

myInstances = []
myClasses = {
    "myObj01": ["Foo", "Bar"],
    "myObj02": ["FooBar",  "Baz"]
    }

for thisClass in myClasses.keys():
    exec("%s = myClass('%s', '%s')" % (thisClass, myClasses[thisClass][0], myClasses[thisClass][1]))
    myInstances.append(getattr(sys.modules[__name__], thisClass))

for thisObj in myInstances:
    print(thisObj.myStr01)
    print(thisObj.myStr02)
1

💎 we have class for students and we want make list of students that each item of list is kind of student 💎

class student :
    def __init__(self,name,major):
        self.name=name
        self.major=major


students = []
count=int(input("enter number of students :"))
#Quantify
for i in range (0,count):
    n=input("please enter name :")
    m=input("please enter major :")
    students.append(student(n,m))
#access
for i in students:
    print (i.name,i.major)
1
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Jun 26, 2022 at 16:44
0

if my_list is the list that you want to store your objects in it and my_object is your object wanted to be stored, use this structure:

my_list.append(my_object)
-3

I think what you're of doing here is using a structure containing your class instances. I don't know the syntax for naming structures in python, but in perl I could create a structure obj.id[x] where x is an incremented integer. Then, I could just refer back to the specific class instance I needed by referencing the struct numerically. Is this anything in the direction of what you're trying to do?

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