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I've recently learned about the @property decorator, but there is (at least) one thing I don't understand about it yet. In this class below, my_name is obviously the property name, but it's not at all clear how the value actually gets assigned. The only assignments are to the underscored _my_name variable, but how does the decorator know that self._my_name corresponds to the my_name property?

class Person:
    def __init__(self, input_name):
        self._my_name = input_name

    @property
    def my_name(self):
        return self._my_name

    @my_name.setter
    def my_name(self, value):
        self._my_name = value
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  • Simply, because that's what you named the property (def my_name). What am I missing??
    – wim
    Jan 30, 2020 at 6:08
  • What invokes my_name? In the init method it only refers to _my_name (with the underscore).
    – supahcraig
    Jan 30, 2020 at 15:31
  • 1
    In the init method, nothing invokes my_name, you just set a normal attribute. If you wanted, you could use self.my_name = input_name in init and this would invoke the property setter (which would then just set the normal attribute the same way). Maybe throw some print statements in there to better understand how/when the setter and getters are invoked.
    – wim
    Jan 30, 2020 at 16:06

2 Answers 2

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Try looking at it this way, the decorator knows nothing about the internals of the class ex: self._my_name. What it does know, is what function to call when retrieving or setting a value.

p = Person('bob')
name = p.my_name     ## the 'getter' function is called: ultimately p.my_name(self)
p.my_name = 'alice'  ## the 'setter' function is called: ultimately p.my_name(self, 'alice')

There is more stuff going on here, under the hood. Have a look at a similar question: How does the @property decorator work? The top answer does a really good job of explaining what the @property is and does.

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  • +1 But maybe it's also worth mentioning: the property could be named differently too (i.e. Python has no hidden sauce which knows that my_name property corresponds with _my_name attribute).
    – wim
    Jan 30, 2020 at 16:03
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A property is a Descriptor. It knows where to get and set _my_name because this is what your getter and setter methods tell it to get and set. Here is a simple example of how a descriptor internally works:

class MyProperty:
    def __init__(self, name):
        # The name of the property we are wrapping
        self.name = name

    def __get__(self, instance, owner):

        # Property was requested from the class, not an instance
        if instance is None:
            return self

        return getattr(instance, self.name)

    def __set__(self, instance, value):

        # Don't overwrite ourself...
        if instance is None:
            return

        setattr(instance, self.name, value)


class Person:
    def __init__(self, input_name):
        self._my_name = input_name

    # Define my_name, that will get/set _my_name
    my_name = MyProperty('_my_name')

jack = Person('Jack')
print(jack.my_name)
jack.my_name = 'Jane'
print(jack.my_name)

The property works a similar way, where it remembers its defined getter, setter and deleter callbacks and call them when the descriptor is retrieved/assigned.

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