I am trying to learn about special attributes of classes. Usually, I use the dir()
method to get the attributes and methods of a class. However, the attribute __mro__
doesn't seem to appear in the results of dir()
for any classes.
By definition, dir()
recursively gets all the attributes and methods all the way up the chain of inheritance, from the passed-in class to the base class, object
. Based on this definition, I assumed that the attribute __mro__
is not actually an attribute of any classes along the aforementioned inheritance chain.
Later, I stumbled upon the class type
and found that it contained the mro
method in its method descriptions help(type)
. I thought, a class must inherit from type
to use this method. So I did a test with a new style class called Apple
:
isinstance(Apple, type)
returnsTrue
issubclass(Apple, type)
returnsFalse
- even
isinstance(object, type)
returnsTrue
Strangely, Apple
does not inherit from type
; instead, it is an instance of it. This confuses me a lot: I do not know where does the __mro__
come from now.