6

I have a project I am working on, and I have a Python Class object that works fine, but I'm curious if it's designed properly when I call the __init__ method.

Right now, I have a function (demand_curve) that will run when you create a new instance of the class object. Is it okay if I run a function when I initialize the class or will it leave me open to problems down the road?

Here is the full code for your reference:

# initalize the lists
prices = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]
quantities = [13.75, 12.5, 11.25, 10.0, 8.75, 7.5, 6.25, 5.0, 3.75, 2.5, 1.25, 0.0]


class MarketFunction(object):   

    def __init__(self, prices, quantities):

        self.prices = prices
        self.quantities = quantities

        self.intercept = None
        self.slope = None

        # Run the demand_curve function to calculate the slope and the intercept.
        self.demand_curve(prices, quantities)

    @property
    def DemandIntercept(self):
        '''
            SUMMARY: Return the intercept of the demand curve.
            RETURN TYPE: float
        '''

        if self.intercept is None:
            intercept = self.demand_curve(self.prices, self.quantities)
            self.intercept = intercept[0]

        return self.intercept

    @property
    def MaxPrice(self):
        '''
            SUMMARY: Return the maximum price from the Prices list.
            RETURN TYPE: float
        '''
        return max(self.prices)

    @property
    def MinPrice(self):
        '''
            SUMMARY: Return the minimum price from the Prices list.
            RETURN TYPE: float
        '''
        return min(self.prices)

    @property
    def MaxQuantity(self):
        '''
            Summary: Return the maximum quantity from the Quantities list.
            RETURN TYPE: int
        '''
        return max(self.prices)

    @property
    def MinQuantity(self):
        '''
            SUMMARY: Return the minimum quantity from the Quantities list.
            RETURN TYPE: int
        '''
        return min(self.quantities)    


    def demand_curve(self, prices, quantities):
        '''
            SUMMARY: Given an array of prices and quantities calculate the slope and Y-intercept of the line and set the
                     values for the MarketFunction object.

            PARA prices: A list of prices
            PARA TYPE: list

            PARA quantites: A list of quantites
            PARA TYPE: list
        '''

        # grab the first few values.
        x0, x1 = prices[0], prices[1]
        y0, y1 = quantities[0], quantities[1]

        # calculate the metrics
        slope = (y1 - y0)/(x1 - x0)
        y_int = (-slope * x0) + y0

        self.intercept = y_int
        self.slope = slope


# create a new instance of the object    
market = MarketFunction(prices = prices, quantities = quantities)

# Grab the DemandIntercept
demand_function = market.DemandIntercept
demand_function

1 Answer 1

6

There is absolutly no problem on using a function or method inside __init__. The object is already allocated and the __init__ method just does that, initialize the object, so it is completely safe.

2
  • C++ allocates the object before it runs the constructor. It's okay to call methods in the constructor in C++; calling virtual methods is the problem. Apr 23, 2019 at 4:41
  • @user2357112, Indeed you are right, I mixed the concepts. Thanks for pointing out!
    – Netwave
    Apr 23, 2019 at 5:41

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.