Python officially recognizes namespaces as a "honking great idea" that we should "do more of". One nice thing about namespaces is their hierarchical presentation that organizes code into related parts. Is there an elegant way to organize python class methods into related parts, much as hierarchical namespaces are organized — especially for the purposes of tab-completion?
Some of my python classes cannot be split up into smaller classes, but have many methods attached to them (easily over a hundred). I also find (and my code's users tell me) that the easiest way to find useful methods is to use tab-completion. But with so many methods, this becomes unwieldy, as an enormous list of options is presented — and usually organized alphabetically, which means that closely related methods may be located in completely different parts of this massive list.
Typically, there are very distinct groups of closely related methods. For example, I have one class in which almost all of the methods fall into one of four groups:
io
statistics
transformations
symmetries
And the io group might have read and write subgroups, where there are different options for the file type to read or write, and then some additional methods involved in looking at the metadata for example. To a small extent, I can address this problem using underscores in my method names. For example, I might have methods like
myobject.io_read_from_csv
myobject.io_write_to_csv
This helps with the classification, but is ugly and still leads to unwieldy tab-completion lists. I would prefer it if the first tab-completion list just had the four options listed above, then when one of those options is selected, additional options would be presented with the next tab.
For a slightly more concrete example, here's a partial list of the hierarchy that I have in mind for my class:
myobject.io
myobject.io.read
myobject.io.read.csv
myobject.io.read.h5
myobject.io.read.npy
myobject.io.write
myobject.io.write.csv
myobject.io.write.h5
myobject.io.write.npy
myobject.io.parameters
myobject.io.parameters.from_csv_header
myobject.io.parameters.from_h5_attributes
...
...
myobject.statistics
myobject.statistics.max
myobject.statistics.max_time
myobject.statistics.norm
...
myobject.transformations
myobject.transformations.rotation
myobject.transformations.boost
myobject.transformations.spatial_translation
myobject.transformations.time_translation
myobject.transformations.supertranslation
...
myobject.symmetries
myobject.symmetries.parity
myobject.symmetries.parity.conjugate
myobject.symmetries.parity.symmetric_part
myobject.symmetries.parity.antisymmetric_part
myobject.symmetries.parity.violation
myobject.symmetries.parity.violation_normalized
myobject.symmetries.xreflection
myobject.symmetries.xreflection.conjugate
myobject.symmetries.xreflection.symmetric_part
...
...
...
One way I can imagine solving this problem is to create classes like IO, Statistics, etc., within my main MyClass class whose sole purpose is to store a reference to myobject and provide the methods that it needs. The main class would then have #property methods that just return the instances of those lower-lever classes, for which tab-completion should then work. Does this make sense? Would it work at all to provide tab-completion in ipython, for example? Would this lead to circular-reference problems? Is there a better way?
It looks like my naive suggestion of defining classes within the class does indeed work with ipython's tab-completion and without any circularity problems.
Here's the proof-of-concept code:
class A(object):
class _B(object):
def __init__(self, a):
self._owner = a
def calculate(self, y):
return y * self._owner.x
def __init__(self, x):
self.x = x
self._b = _B(self)
#property
def b(self):
return self._b
(In fact, it would be even simpler if I used self.b = _B(self), and I could skip the property, but I like this because it impedes overwriting b from outside the class. Plus this shows that this more complicated case still works.)
So if I create a = A(1.2), for example, I can hit a.<TAB> and get b as the completion, then a.b.<TAB> suggests calculate as the completion. I haven't run into any problems with this structure in my brief tests so far, and the changes to my code aren't very big — just adding ._owner into a lot of the methods code.
This is a question about a clean, pythonic way to juggle some different instance methods.
I have a class that operates a little differently depending on certain inputs. The differences didn't seem big enough to justify producing entirely new classes. I have to interface the class with one of several data "providers". I thought I was being smart when I introduced a dictionary:
self.interface_tools={'TYPE_A':{ ... various ..., 'data_supplier':self.current_data},
'TYPE_B':{ ... various ..., 'data_supplier':self.predicted_data} }
Then, as part of the class initialization, I have an input "source_name" and I do ...
# ... various ....
self.data_supplier = self.interface_tools[source_name]['data_supplier']
self.current_data and self.predicted_data need the same input parameter, so when it comes time to call the method, I don't have to distinguish them. I can just call
new_data = self.data_supplier(param1)
But now I need to interface with a new data source -- call it "TYPE_C" -- and it needs more input parameters. There are ways to do this, but nothing I can think of is very clean. For instance, I could just add the new parameters to the old data_suppliers and never use them, so then the call would look like
new_data = self.data_supplier(param1,param2,param3)
But I don't like that. I could add an if block
if self.data_source != 'TYPE_C':
new_data = self.data_supplie(param1)
else:
new_data = self.data_c_supplier(param1,param2,param3)
but avoiding if blocks like this was exactly what I was trying to do in the first place with that dictionary I came up with.
So the upshot is: I have a few "data_supplier" routines. Now that my project has expanded, they have different input lists. But I want my class to be able to treat them all the same to the extent possible. Any ideas? Thanks.
Sounds like your functions could be making use of variable length argument lists.
That said, you could also just make subclasses. They're fairly cheap to make, and would solve your problem here. This is pretty much the case they were designed for.
You could make all your data_suppliers accept a single argument and make it a dictionary or a list or even a NamedTuple.
I am working with models of neurons. One class I am designing is a cell class which is a topological description of a neuron (several compartments connected together). It has many parameters but they are all relevant, for example:
number of axon segments, apical bifibrications, somatic length, somatic diameter, apical length, branching randomness, branching length and so on and so on... there are about 15 parameters in total!
I can set all these to some default value but my class looks crazy with several lines for parameters. This kind of thing must happen occasionally to other people too, is there some obvious better way to design this or am I doing the right thing?
UPDATE:
As some of you have asked I have attached my code for the class, as you can see this class has a huge number of parameters (>15) but they are all used and are necessary to define the topology of a cell. The problem essentially is that the physical object they create is very complex. I have attached an image representation of objects produced by this class. How would experienced programmers do this differently to avoid so many parameters in the definition?
class LayerV(__Cell):
def __init__(self,somatic_dendrites=10,oblique_dendrites=10,
somatic_bifibs=3,apical_bifibs=10,oblique_bifibs=3,
L_sigma=0.0,apical_branch_prob=1.0,
somatic_branch_prob=1.0,oblique_branch_prob=1.0,
soma_L=30,soma_d=25,axon_segs=5,myelin_L=100,
apical_sec1_L=200,oblique_sec1_L=40,somadend_sec1_L=60,
ldecf=0.98):
import random
import math
#make main the regions:
axon=Axon(n_axon_seg=axon_segs)
soma=Soma(diam=soma_d,length=soma_L)
main_apical_dendrite=DendriticTree(bifibs=
apical_bifibs,first_sec_L=apical_sec1_L,
L_sigma=L_sigma,L_decrease_factor=ldecf,
first_sec_d=9,branch_prob=apical_branch_prob)
#make the somatic denrites
somatic_dends=self.dendrite_list(num_dends=somatic_dendrites,
bifibs=somatic_bifibs,first_sec_L=somadend_sec1_L,
first_sec_d=1.5,L_sigma=L_sigma,
branch_prob=somatic_branch_prob,L_decrease_factor=ldecf)
#make oblique dendrites:
oblique_dends=self.dendrite_list(num_dends=oblique_dendrites,
bifibs=oblique_bifibs,first_sec_L=oblique_sec1_L,
first_sec_d=1.5,L_sigma=L_sigma,
branch_prob=oblique_branch_prob,L_decrease_factor=ldecf)
#connect axon to soma:
axon_section=axon.get_connecting_section()
self.soma_body=soma.body
soma.connect(axon_section,region_end=1)
#connect apical dendrite to soma:
apical_dendrite_firstsec=main_apical_dendrite.get_connecting_section()
soma.connect(apical_dendrite_firstsec,region_end=0)
#connect oblique dendrites to apical first section:
for dendrite in oblique_dends:
apical_location=math.exp(-5*random.random()) #for now connecting randomly but need to do this on some linspace
apsec=dendrite.get_connecting_section()
apsec.connect(apical_dendrite_firstsec,apical_location,0)
#connect dendrites to soma:
for dend in somatic_dends:
dendsec=dend.get_connecting_section()
soma.connect(dendsec,region_end=random.random()) #for now connecting randomly but need to do this on some linspace
#assign public sections
self.axon_iseg=axon.iseg
self.axon_hill=axon.hill
self.axon_nodes=axon.nodes
self.axon_myelin=axon.myelin
self.axon_sections=[axon.hill]+[axon.iseg]+axon.nodes+axon.myelin
self.soma_sections=[soma.body]
self.apical_dendrites=main_apical_dendrite.all_sections+self.seclist(oblique_dends)
self.somatic_dendrites=self.seclist(somatic_dends)
self.dendrites=self.apical_dendrites+self.somatic_dendrites
self.all_sections=self.axon_sections+[self.soma_sections]+self.dendrites
UPDATE: This approach may be suited in your specific case, but it definitely has its downsides, see is kwargs an antipattern?
Try this approach:
class Neuron(object):
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
prop_defaults = {
"num_axon_segments": 0,
"apical_bifibrications": "fancy default",
...
}
for (prop, default) in prop_defaults.iteritems():
setattr(self, prop, kwargs.get(prop, default))
You can then create a Neuron like this:
n = Neuron(apical_bifibrications="special value")
I'd say there is nothing wrong with this approach - if you need 15 parameters to model something, you need 15 parameters. And if there's no suitable default value, you have to pass in all 15 parameters when creating an object. Otherwise, you could just set the default and change it later via a setter or directly.
Another approach is to create subclasses for certain common kinds of neurons (in your example) and provide good defaults for certain values, or derive the values from other parameters.
Or you could encapsulate parts of the neuron in separate classes and reuse these parts for the actual neurons you model. I.e., you could write separate classes for modeling a synapse, an axon, the soma, etc.
You could perhaps use a Python"dict" object ?
http://docs.python.org/tutorial/datastructures.html#dictionaries
Having so many parameters suggests that the class is probably doing too many things.
I suggest that you want to divide your class into several classes, each of which take some of your parameters. That way each class is simpler and won't take so many parameters.
Without knowing more about your code, I can't say exactly how you should split it up.
Looks like you could cut down the number of arguments by constructing objects such as Axon, Soma and DendriticTree outside of the LayerV constructor, and passing those objects instead.
Some of the parameters are only used in constructing e.g. DendriticTree, others are used in other places as well, so the problem it's not as clear cut, but I would definitely try that approach.
could you supply some example code of what you are working on? It would help to get an idea of what you are doing and get help to you sooner.
If it's just the arguments you are passing to the class that make it long, you don't have to put it all in __init__. You can set the parameters after you create the class, or pass a dictionary/class full of the parameters as an argument.
class MyClass(object):
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
arg1 = None
arg2 = None
arg3 = None
for (key, value) in kwargs.iteritems():
if hasattr(self, key):
setattr(self, key, value)
if __name__ == "__main__":
a_class = MyClass()
a_class.arg1 = "A string"
a_class.arg2 = 105
a_class.arg3 = ["List", 100, 50.4]
b_class = MyClass(arg1 = "Astring", arg2 = 105, arg3 = ["List", 100, 50.4])
After looking over your code and realizing I have no idea how any of those parameters relate to each other (soley because of my lack of knowledge on the subject of neuroscience) I would point you to a very good book on object oriented design. Building Skills in Object Oriented Design by Steven F. Lott is an excellent read and I think would help you, and anyone else in laying out object oriented programs.
It is released under the Creative Commons License, so is free for you to use, here is a link of it in PDF format http://homepage.mac.com/s_lott/books/oodesign/build-python/latex/BuildingSkillsinOODesign.pdf
I think your problem boils down to the overall design of your classes. Sometimes, though very rarely, you need a whole lot of arguments to initialize, and most of the responses here have detailed other ways of initialization, but in a lot of cases you can break the class up into more easier to handle and less cumbersome classes.
This is similar to the other solutions that iterate through a default dictionary, but it uses a more compact notation:
class MyClass(object):
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
self.__dict__.update(dict(
arg1=123,
arg2=345,
arg3=678,
), **kwargs)
Can you give a more detailed use case ? Maybe a prototype pattern will work:
If there are some similarities in groups of objects, a prototype pattern might help.
Do you have a lot of cases where one population of neurons is just like another except different in some way ? ( i.e. rather than having a small number of discrete classes,
you have a large number of classes that slightly differ from each other. )
Python is a classed based language, but just as you can simulate class based
programming in a prototype based language like Javascript, you can simulate
prototypes by giving your class a CLONE method, that creates a new object and
populates its ivars from the parent. Write the clone method so that keyword parameters
passed to it override the "inherited" parameters, so you can call it with something
like:
new_neuron = old_neuron.clone( branching_length=n1, branching_randomness=r2 )
I have never had to deal with this situation, or this topic. Your description implies to me that you may find, as you develop the design, that there are a number of additional classes that will become relevant - compartment is the most obvious. If these do emerge as classes in their own right, it is probable that some of your parameters become parameters of these additional classes.
You could create a class for your parameters.
Instead passing a bunch of parameters, you pass one class.
In my opinion, in your case the easy solution is to pass higher order objects as parameter.
For example, in your __init__ you have a DendriticTree that uses several arguments from your main class LayerV:
main_apical_dendrite = DendriticTree(
bifibs=apical_bifibs,
first_sec_L=apical_sec1_L,
L_sigma=L_sigma,
L_decrease_factor=ldecf,
first_sec_d=9,
branch_prob=apical_branch_prob
)
Instead of passing these 6 arguments to your LayerV you would pass the DendriticTree object directly (thus saving 5 arguments).
You probably want to have this values accessible everywhere, therefore you will have to save this DendriticTree:
class LayerV(__Cell):
def __init__(self, main_apical_dendrite, ...):
self.main_apical_dendrite = main_apical_dendrite
If you want to have a default value too, you can have:
class LayerV(__Cell):
def __init__(self, main_apical_dendrite=None, ...):
self.main_apical_dendrite = main_apical_dendrite or DendriticTree()
This way you delegate what the default DendriticTree should be to the class dedicated to that matter instead of having this logic in the higher order class that LayerV.
Finally, when you need to access the apical_bifibs you used to pass to LayerV you just access it via self.main_apical_dendrite.bifibs.
In general, even if the class you are creating is not a clear composition of several classes, your goal is to find a logical way to split your parameters. Not only to make your code cleaner, but mostly to help people understand what these parameter will be used for. In the extreme cases where you can't split them, I think it's totally ok to have a class with that many parameters. If there is no clear way to split arguments, then you'll probably end up with something even less clear than a list of 15 arguments.
If you feel like creating a class to group parameters together is overkill, then you can simply use collections.namedtuple which can have default values as shown here.
Want to reiterate what a number of people have said. Theres nothing wrong with that amount of parameters. Especially when it comes to scientific computing/programming
Take for example, sklearn's KMeans++ clustering implementation which has 11 parameters you can init with. Like that, there are numerous examples and nothing wrong with them
I would say there is nothing wrong if make sure you need those params. If you really wanna make it more readable I would recommend following style.
I wouldn't say that a best practice or what, it just make others easily know what is necessary for this Object and what is option.
class LayerV(__Cell):
# author: {name, url} who made this info
def __init__(self, no_default_params, some_necessary_params):
self.necessary_param = some_necessary_params
self.no_default_param = no_default_params
self.something_else = "default"
self.some_option = "default"
def b_option(self, value):
self.some_option = value
return self
def b_else(self, value):
self.something_else = value
return self
I think the benefit for this style is:
You can easily know the params which is necessary in __init__ method
Unlike setter, you don't need two lines to construct the object if you need set an option value.
The disadvantage is, you created more methods in your class than before.
sample:
la = LayerV("no_default", "necessary").b_else("sample_else")
After all, if you have a lot of "necessary" and "no_default" params, always think about is this class(method) do too many things.
If your answer is not, just go ahead.
I'm coding a poker hand evaluator as my first programming project. I've made it through three classes, each of which accomplishes its narrowly-defined task very well:
HandRange = a string-like object (e.g. "AA"). getHands() returns a list of tuples for each specific hand within the string:
[(Ad,Ac),(Ad,Ah),(Ad,As),(Ac,Ah),(Ac,As),(Ah,As)]
Translation = a dictionary that maps the return list from getHands to values that are useful for a given evaluator (yes, this can probably be refactored into another class).
{'As':52, 'Ad':51, ...}
Evaluator = takes a list from HandRange (as translated by Translator), enumerates all possible hand matchups and provides win % for each.
My question: what should my "domain" class for using all these classes look like, given that I may want to connect to it via either a shell UI or a GUI? Right now, it looks like an assembly line process:
user_input = HandRange()
x = Translation.translateList(user_input)
y = Evaluator.getEquities(x)
This smells funny in that it feels like it's procedural when I ought to be using OO.
In a more general way: if I've spent so much time ensuring that my classes are well defined, narrowly focused, orthogonal, whatever ... how do I actually manage work flow in my program when I need to use all of them in a row?
Thanks,
Mike
Don't make a fetish of object orientation -- Python supports multiple paradigms, after all! Think of your user-defined types, AKA classes, as building blocks that gradually give you a "language" that's closer to your domain rather than to general purpose language / library primitives.
At some point you'll want to code "verbs" (actions) that use your building blocks to perform something (under command from whatever interface you'll supply -- command line, RPC, web, GUI, ...) -- and those may be module-level functions as well as methods within some encompassing class. You'll surely want a class if you need multiple instances, and most likely also if the actions involve updating "state" (instance variables of a class being much nicer than globals) or if inheritance and/or polomorphism come into play; but, there is no a priori reason to prefer classes to functions otherwise.
If you find yourself writing static methods, yearning for a singleton (or Borg) design pattern, writing a class with no state (just methods) -- these are all "code smells" that should prompt you to check whether you really need a class for that subset of your code, or rather whether you may be overcomplicating things and should use a module with functions for that part of your code. (Sometimes after due consideration you'll unearth some different reason for preferring a class, and that's allright too, but the point is, don't just pick a class over a module w/functions "by reflex", without critically thinking about it!).
You could create a Poker class that ties these all together and intialize all of that stuff in the __init__() method:
class Poker(object):
def __init__(self, user_input=HandRange()):
self.user_input = user_input
self.translation = Translation.translateList(user_input)
self.evaluator = Evaluator.getEquities(x)
# and so on...
p = Poker()
# etc, etc...