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
def my_name
). What am I missing??my_name
, you just set a normal attribute. If you wanted, you could useself.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.