How to distinguish between a function and a class method? - python

If a variable refers to either a function or a class method, how can I find out which one it is and get the class type in case it is a class method especially when the class is still being declared as in the given example.
eg.
def get_info(function_or_method):
print function_or_method
class Foo(object):
def __init__(self):
pass
get_info(__init__)
def bar():
pass
get_info(bar)
Update to question after the first two responses from David and J. F. Sebastian
To reemphasize a point which J.F. Sebastian alluded to, I want to be able to distinguish it when the function is being declared within the class (when the type I am getting is a function and not a bound or unbound method). ie. where the first call to get_info(__init__) happens I would like to be able to detect that its a method being declared as a part of a class.
This question came up since I am putting a decorator around it and it gets a handle to the init function and I can't actually figure out if a method is being declared within a class or as a stand alone function

You can distinguish between the two by checking the type:
>>> type(bar)
<type 'function'>
>>> type(Foo.__init__)
<type 'instancemethod'>
or
>>> import types
>>> isinstance(bar, types.FunctionType)
True
>>> isinstance(bar, types.UnboundMethodType)
True
which is the way you'd do it in an if statement.
Also, you can get the class from the im_class attribute of the method:
>>> Foo.__init__.im_class
__main__.Foo

At the time you are calling get_info(__init__) (inside class definition) the __init__ is an ordinary function.
def get_info(function_or_method):
print function_or_method
class Foo(object):
def __init__(self):
pass
get_info(__init__) # function
def bar():
pass
get_info(Foo.__init__) # unbound method
get_info(Foo().__init__) # bound method
get_info(bar) # function
Output (CPython, IronPython):
<function __init__ at ...>
<unbound method Foo.__init__>
<bound method Foo.__init__ of <__main__.Foo object at ...>>
<function bar at ...>
Output (Jython):
<function __init__ 1>
<unbound method Foo.__init__>
<method Foo.__init__ of Foo instance 2>
<function bar 3>

To reemphasize a point which J.F. Sebastian alluded to, I want to be able to distinguish it when the function is being declared within the class (when the type I am getting is a function and not a bound or unbound method). ie. where the first call to get_info(__init__) happens I would like to be able to detect that its a method being declared as a part of a class.
This question came up since I am putting a decorator around it and it gets a handle to the init function and I can't actually figure out if a method is being declared within a class or as a stand alone function
You can't. J.F. Sebastian's answer is still 100% applicable. When the body of the class definition is being executed, the class itself doesn't exist yet. The statements (the __init__ function definition, and the get_info(__init__) call) happen in a new local namespace; at the time the call to get_info occurs, __init__ is a reference to the function in that namespace, which is indistinguishable from a function defined outside of a class.

Related

How does python know when to pass in `self`?

Consider a trivial example:
class C:
#staticmethod
def my_static_method():
print("static")
def my_instance_method(self):
print("self")
When I call C().my_static_method(), python doesn't pass the instance of C into my_static_method, and the descriptor that my_static_method references doesn't expect an instance of C, either.
This makes sense.
But then when I call C().my_instance_method(), how does python know to pass the instance of C that I'm calling my_instance_method from in as an argument, without me specifying anything?
As the link explains, function objects are descriptors! Just like staticmethod objects.
They have a __get__ method which returns a bound-method object, which essentially just partially applies the instance itself as the first positional argument. Consider:
>>> def foo(self):
... return self.bar
...
>>> class Baz:
... bar = 42
...
>>> baz = Baz()
>>> bound_method = foo.__get__(baz, Baz)
>>> bound_method
<bound method foo of <__main__.Baz object at 0x7ffcd001c7f0>>
>>> method()
42
By adding the #staticmethod decorator to my_static_method, you told python not to pass the calling instance of C into the function. So you can call this function as C.my_static_method().
By calling C() you created an instance of C. Then you called the non static function my_instance_method() which Python happily passed your new instance of C as the first parameter.
What happens when you call C.my_instance_method() ?
Rhetorical: You'll get a "missing one required arg self" exception -- since my_instance_method only works when calling from an instance unless you decorate it as static.
Of course you can still call the static member from an instance C().my_static_method() but you don't have a self param so no access to the instance.
The key point here is that methods are just functions that happen to be attributes of a class. The actual magic, in Python, happens in the attribute lookup process. The link you give explains earlier just how much happens every time x.y happens in Python. (Remember, everything is an object; that includes functions, classes, modules, type (which is an instance of itself)...)
This process is why descriptors can work at all; why we need explicit self; and why we can do fun things like calling a method with normal function call syntax (as long as we look it up from the class rather than an instance), alias it, mimic the method binding process with functools.partial....
Suppose we have c = C(). When you do c.my_instance_method (never mind calling it for now), Python looks for my_instance_method in type(c) (i.e., in the C class), and also checks if it's a descriptor, and also if it's specifically a data descriptor. Functions are non-data descriptors; even outside of a class, you can write
>>> def x(spam): return spam
...
>>> x.__get__
<method-wrapper '__get__' of function object at 0x...>
Because of the priority rules, as long as c doesn't directly have an attribute attached with the same name, the function will be found in C and its __get__ will be used. Note that the __get__ in question comes from the class - but it isn't using the same process as x.__get__ above. That code looks in the class because that's one of the places checked for an attribute lookup; but when c.my_instance_method redirects to C.my_instance_method.__get__, it's looking there directly - attaching a __get__ attribute directly to the function wouldn't change anything (which is why staticmethod is implemented as a class instead).
That __get__ implements the actual method binding. Let's pretend we found x as a method in the str class:
>>> x.__get__('spam', str)
<bound method x of 'spam'>
>>> x.__get__('spam', str)()
'spam'
Remember, although the function in question takes three arguments, we're calling __get__, itself, as a method - so x gets bound to it in the same way. Equivalently, and more faithful to the actual process:
>>> type(x).__get__(x, 'spam', str)
<bound method x of 'spam'>
>>> type(x).__get__(x, 'spam', str)()
'spam'
So what exactly is that "bound method", anyway?
>>> bound = type(x).__get__(x, 'spam', str)
>>> type(bound)
<class 'method'>
>>> bound.__call__
<method-wrapper '__call__' of method object at 0x...>
>>> bound.__func__
<function x at 0x...>
>>> bound.__self__
'spam'
>>> type(bound)(x, 'eggs')
<bound method x of 'eggs'>
Pretty much what you'd expect: it's a callable object that stores and uses the original function and self value, and does the obvious thing in __call__.

Can we create instance method with out self

I am trying to create class that having one instance method, is it possible to create instance method without self.
class A():
def display():
print("Hi")
a = A()
a.display()
I am getting like this: Type Error: display() takes no arguments (1 given)
For an instance method, you need to add a parameter that represents the instance itself. It MUST be present and it MUST be the first parameter of the method - that's mandatory, you cannot change this. It can be called whatever you want, although self is the standard used by the community, which you should also follow.
class A():
def display(self):
print('Hi')
Now, as you probably noticed, we're not doing anything in particular with the instance in the display method. To avoid this redundancy, we need to use a different type of method.
A method which does not take an instance as an argument is called a static method and is represented by the #staticmethod decorator directy above the function definition:
class A():
#staticmethod
def display():
print('Hi')
Both snippets will run without errors and, producing the same output when you execute the following code:
a = A()
a.display()
But the second version is preferred - because explicit is better than implicit.
Using #staticmethod will work... but I won't recommend it for beginner uses
Usually function define an object behavior so you'll need the object itself using self !
As others have pointed out, an instance method must have at least one parameter, as the object itself is passed (implicitly) as the first argument. But why?
This def statement, like any other, defines a function, not a method. So where does the method come from? Let's go step by step.
class A:
def display(self):
print("Hi")
If we look directly in the dictionary that stores a class's attributes, we see that display is bound to an instance of function.
>>> type(A.__dict__['display'])
<class 'function'>
We get the same result if we try to access the attribute using the normal dot syntax:
>>> type(A.display)
<class 'function'>
But something ... different ... happens if we try to access that function via an instance of the class:
>>> type(A().display)
<class 'method'>
Where did the method come from? Anytime you access an attribute, the machinery that handles such access looks to see if the result has a __get__ method. The function type provides such a method, so instead of getting the function itself back, you get the result of calling that function's __get__ method. That is, A().display is really the same as A.display.__get__(A(), A). And what __get__ returns is an object that does two things:
Saves a reference to the instance A()
Saves a reference to the function A.display.
When you try to call this object, what it does is takes any arguments passed to it, and passes the saved reference to A() along with those arguments to the function A.display. That is,
a = A()
a.display() == A.display.__get__(a, A)(a)
An that's why display gets defined with one more argument than is seemingly necessary.
Others have also mentioned static methods. What does #staticmethod do? staticmethod is another type, whose instances wrap a function. The staticmethod definition of __get__, though, doesn't do anything other than return the underlying function, not any kind of new method object. So given
class A:
#staticmethod
def display():
print("Hi")
we can see that display is an instance of static method, not a function:
>>> >>> type(A.__dict__['display'])
<class 'staticmethod'>
and that the __get__ method returns the function itself, whether the attribute is accessed via the class
>>> type(A.display)
<class 'function'>
or an instance
>>> type(A().display)
<class 'function'>

A function in a class without any decorator or `self`

I have following class with a function:
class A:
def myfn():
print("In myfn method.")
Here, the function does not have self as argument. It also does not have #classmethod or #staticmethod as decorator. However, it works if called with class:
A.myfn()
Output:
In myfn method.
But give an error if called from any instance:
a = A()
a.myfn()
Error output:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "testing.py", line 16, in <module>
a.myfn()
TypeError: myfn() takes 0 positional arguments but 1 was given
probably because self was also sent as an argument.
What kind of function will this be called? Will it be a static function? Is it advisable to use function like this in classes? What is the drawback?
Edit: This function works only when called with class and not with object/instance. My main question is what is such a function called?
Edit2: It seems from the answers that this type of function, despite being the simplest form, is not accepted as legal. However, as no serious drawback is mentioned in any of many answers, I find this can be a useful construct, especially to group my own static functions in a class that I can call as needed. I would not need to create any instance of this class. In the least, it saves me from typing #staticmethod every time and makes code look less complex. It also gets derived neatly for someone to extend my class. Although all such functions can be kept at top/global level, keeping them in class is more modular. However, I feel there should be a specific name for such a simple construct which works in this specific way and it should be recognized as legal. It may also help beginners understand why self argument is needed for usual functions in a Python class. This will only add to the simplicity of this great language.
The function type implements the descriptor protocol, which means when you access myfn via the class or an instance of the class, you don't get the actual function back; you get instead the result of that function's __get__ method. That is,
A.myfn == A.myfn.__get__(None, A)
Here, myfn is an instance method, though one that hasn't been defined properly to be used as such. When accessed via the class, though, the return value of __get__ is simply the function object itself, and the function can be called the same as a static method.
Access via an instance results in a different call to __get__. If a is an instance of A, then
a.myfn() == A.myfn.__get__(a, A)
Here , __get__ tries to return, essentially, a partial application of myfn to a, but because myfn doesn't take any arguments, that fails.
You might ask, what is a static method? staticmethod is a type that wraps a function and defines its own __get__ method. That method returns the underlying function whether or not the attribute is accessed via the class or an instance. Otherwise, there is very little difference between a static method and an ordinary function.
This is not a true method. Correctly declarated instance methods should have a self argument (the name is only a convention and can be changed if you want hard to read code), and classmethods and staticmethods should be introduced by their respective decorator.
But at a lower level, def in a class declaration just creates a function and assigns it to a class member. That is exactly what happens here: A.my_fn is a function and can successfully be called as A.my_fn().
But as it was not declared with #staticmethod, it is not a true static method and it cannot be applied on a A instance. Python sees a member of that name that happens to be a function which is neither a static nor a class method, so it prepends the current instance to the list of arguments and tries to execute it.
To answer your exact question, this is not a method but just a function that happens to be assigned to a class member.
Such a function isn't the same as what #staticmethod provides, but is indeed a static method of sorts.
With #staticmethod you can also call the static method on an instance of the class. If A is a class and A.a is a static method, you'll be able to do both A.a() and A().a(). Without this decorator, only the first example will work, because for the second one, as you correctly noticed, "self [will] also [be] sent as an argument":
class A:
#staticmethod
def a():
return 1
Running this:
>>> A.a() # `A` is the class itself
1
>>> A().a() # `A()` is an instance of the class `A`
1
On the other hand:
class B:
def b():
return 2
Now, the second version doesn't work:
>>> B.b()
2
>>> B().b()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: b() takes 0 positional arguments but 1 was given
further to #chepnet's answer, if you define a class whose objects implement the descriptor protocol like:
class Descr:
def __get__(self, obj, type=None):
print('get', obj, type)
def __set__(self, obj, value):
print('set', obj, value)
def __delete__(self, obj):
print('delete', obj)
you can embed an instance of this in a class and invoke various operations on it:
class Foo:
foo = Descr()
Foo.foo
obj = Foo()
obj.foo
which outputs:
get None <class '__main__.Foo'>
get <__main__.Foo object at 0x106d4f9b0> <class '__main__.Foo'>
as functions also implement the descriptor protocol, we can replay this by doing:
def bar():
pass
print(bar)
print(bar.__get__(None, Foo))
print(bar.__get__(obj, Foo))
which outputs:
<function bar at 0x1062da730>
<function bar at 0x1062da730>
<bound method bar of <__main__.Foo object at 0x106d4f9b0>>
hopefully that complements chepnet's answer which I found a little terse/opaque

Python - why can I call a class method with an instance?

New to Python and having done some reading, I'm making some methods in my custom class class methods rather than instance methods.
So I tested my code but I hadn't changed some of the method calls to call the method in the class rather than the instance, but they still worked:
class myClass:
#classmethod:
def foo(cls):
print 'Class method foo called with %s.'%(cls)
def bar(self):
print 'Instance method bar called with %s.'%(self)
myClass.foo()
thing = myClass()
thing.foo()
thing.bar()
This produces:
class method foo called with __main__.myClass.
class method foo called with __main__.myClass.
instance method bar called with <__main__.myClass instance at 0x389ba4>.
So what I'm wondering is why I can call a class method (foo) on an instance (thing.foo), (although it's the class that gets passed to the method)? It kind of makes sense, as 'thing' is a 'myClass', but I was expecting Python to give an error saying something along the lines of 'foo is a class method and can't be called on an instance'.
Is this just an expected consequence of inheritance with the 'thing' object inheriting the foo method from its superclass?
If I try to call the instance method via the class:
myClass.bar()
then I get:
TypeError: unbound method bar() must be called with myClass instance...
which makes perfect sense.
You can call it on an instance because #classmethod is a decorator (it takes a function as an argument and returns a new function).
Here is some relavent information from the Python documentation
It can be called either on the class (such as C.f()) or on an instance
(such as C().f()). The instance is ignored except for its class. If a
class method is called for a derived class, the derived class object
is passed as the implied first argument.
There's also quite a good SO discussion on #classmethod here.
Let's start with a quick overview of the descriptor protocol. If a class defines a __get__ method, an instance of that class is a descriptor. Accessing a descriptor as the attribute of another object produces the return value of the __get__ method, not the descriptor itself.
A function is a descriptor; this is how instance methods are implemented. Given
class myClass:
#classmethod:
def foo(cls):
print('Class method foo called with %s.' % (cls,))
def bar(self):
print 'Instance method bar called with %s.'%(self)
c = myClass()
the expression c.bar is equivalent to
myClass.__dict__['bar'].__get__(c, myClass)
while the expression myClass.bar is equivalent to the expression
myClass.__dict__['bar'].__get__(None, myClass)
Note the only difference is in the object passed as the first argument to __get__. The former returns a new method object, which when called passes c and its own arguments on to the function bar. This is why c.bar() and C.bar(c) are equivalent. The latter simply returns the function bar itself.
classmethod is a type that provides a different implementation of __get__. This means that c.foo() and myClass.foo() call __get__ as before:
# c.foo
myClass.__dict__['foo'].__get__(c, myClass)
# myClass.foo
myClass.__dict__['foo'].__get__(None, myClass)
Now, however, both calls return the same method object, and this method object, when called, passes myClass as the first argument to the original function object. That is, c.foo() is equivalent to myClass.foo(), which
is equivalent to x(myClass) (where x is the original function defined before the decoration bound the name foo to an instance of classmethod).

Class method differences in Python: bound, unbound and static

What is the difference between the following class methods?
Is it that one is static and the other is not?
class Test(object):
def method_one(self):
print "Called method_one"
def method_two():
print "Called method_two"
a_test = Test()
a_test.method_one()
a_test.method_two()
In Python, there is a distinction between bound and unbound methods.
Basically, a call to a member function (like method_one), a bound function
a_test.method_one()
is translated to
Test.method_one(a_test)
i.e. a call to an unbound method. Because of that, a call to your version of method_two will fail with a TypeError
>>> a_test = Test()
>>> a_test.method_two()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: method_two() takes no arguments (1 given)
You can change the behavior of a method using a decorator
class Test(object):
def method_one(self):
print "Called method_one"
#staticmethod
def method_two():
print "Called method two"
The decorator tells the built-in default metaclass type (the class of a class, cf. this question) to not create bound methods for method_two.
Now, you can invoke static method both on an instance or on the class directly:
>>> a_test = Test()
>>> a_test.method_one()
Called method_one
>>> a_test.method_two()
Called method_two
>>> Test.method_two()
Called method_two
Methods in Python are a very, very simple thing once you understood the basics of the descriptor system. Imagine the following class:
class C(object):
def foo(self):
pass
Now let's have a look at that class in the shell:
>>> C.foo
<unbound method C.foo>
>>> C.__dict__['foo']
<function foo at 0x17d05b0>
As you can see if you access the foo attribute on the class you get back an unbound method, however inside the class storage (the dict) there is a function. Why's that? The reason for this is that the class of your class implements a __getattribute__ that resolves descriptors. Sounds complex, but is not. C.foo is roughly equivalent to this code in that special case:
>>> C.__dict__['foo'].__get__(None, C)
<unbound method C.foo>
That's because functions have a __get__ method which makes them descriptors. If you have an instance of a class it's nearly the same, just that None is the class instance:
>>> c = C()
>>> C.__dict__['foo'].__get__(c, C)
<bound method C.foo of <__main__.C object at 0x17bd4d0>>
Now why does Python do that? Because the method object binds the first parameter of a function to the instance of the class. That's where self comes from. Now sometimes you don't want your class to make a function a method, that's where staticmethod comes into play:
class C(object):
#staticmethod
def foo():
pass
The staticmethod decorator wraps your class and implements a dummy __get__ that returns the wrapped function as function and not as a method:
>>> C.__dict__['foo'].__get__(None, C)
<function foo at 0x17d0c30>
Hope that explains it.
When you call a class member, Python automatically uses a reference to the object as the first parameter. The variable self actually means nothing, it's just a coding convention. You could call it gargaloo if you wanted. That said, the call to method_two would raise a TypeError, because Python is automatically trying to pass a parameter (the reference to its parent object) to a method that was defined as having no parameters.
To actually make it work, you could append this to your class definition:
method_two = staticmethod(method_two)
or you could use the #staticmethod function decorator.
>>> class Class(object):
... def __init__(self):
... self.i = 0
... def instance_method(self):
... self.i += 1
... print self.i
... c = 0
... #classmethod
... def class_method(cls):
... cls.c += 1
... print cls.c
... #staticmethod
... def static_method(s):
... s += 1
... print s
...
>>> a = Class()
>>> a.class_method()
1
>>> Class.class_method() # The class shares this value across instances
2
>>> a.instance_method()
1
>>> Class.instance_method() # The class cannot use an instance method
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: unbound method instance_method() must be called with Class instance as first argument (got nothing instead)
>>> Class.instance_method(a)
2
>>> b = 0
>>> a.static_method(b)
1
>>> a.static_method(a.c) # Static method does not have direct access to
>>> # class or instance properties.
3
>>> Class.c # a.c above was passed by value and not by reference.
2
>>> a.c
2
>>> a.c = 5 # The connection between the instance
>>> Class.c # and its class is weak as seen here.
2
>>> Class.class_method()
3
>>> a.c
5
method_two won't work because you're defining a member function but not telling it what the function is a member of. If you execute the last line you'll get:
>>> a_test.method_two()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: method_two() takes no arguments (1 given)
If you're defining member functions for a class the first argument must always be 'self'.
Accurate explanation from Armin Ronacher above, expanding on his answers so that beginners like me understand it well:
Difference in the methods defined in a class, whether static or instance method(there is yet another type - class method - not discussed here so skipping it), lay in the fact whether they are somehow bound to the class instance or not. For example, say whether the method receives a reference to the class instance during runtime
class C:
a = []
def foo(self):
pass
C # this is the class object
C.a # is a list object (class property object)
C.foo # is a function object (class property object)
c = C()
c # this is the class instance
The __dict__ dictionary property of the class object holds the reference to all the properties and methods of a class object and thus
>>> C.__dict__['foo']
<function foo at 0x17d05b0>
the method foo is accessible as above. An important point to note here is that everything in python is an object and so references in the dictionary above are themselves pointing to other objects. Let me call them Class Property Objects - or as CPO within the scope of my answer for brevity.
If a CPO is a descriptor, then python interpretor calls the __get__() method of the CPO to access the value it contains.
In order to determine if a CPO is a descriptor, python interpretor checks if it implements the descriptor protocol. To implement descriptor protocol is to implement 3 methods
def __get__(self, instance, owner)
def __set__(self, instance, value)
def __delete__(self, instance)
for e.g.
>>> C.__dict__['foo'].__get__(c, C)
where
self is the CPO (it could be an instance of list, str, function etc) and is supplied by the runtime
instance is the instance of the class where this CPO is defined (the object 'c' above) and needs to be explicity supplied by us
owner is the class where this CPO is defined(the class object 'C' above) and needs to be supplied by us. However this is because we are calling it on the CPO. when we call it on the instance, we dont need to supply this since the runtime can supply the instance or its class(polymorphism)
value is the intended value for the CPO and needs to be supplied by us
Not all CPO are descriptors. For example
>>> C.__dict__['foo'].__get__(None, C)
<function C.foo at 0x10a72f510>
>>> C.__dict__['a'].__get__(None, C)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'list' object has no attribute '__get__'
This is because the list class doesnt implement the descriptor protocol.
Thus the argument self in c.foo(self) is required because its method signature is actually this C.__dict__['foo'].__get__(c, C) (as explained above, C is not needed as it can be found out or polymorphed)
And this is also why you get a TypeError if you dont pass that required instance argument.
If you notice the method is still referenced via the class Object C and the binding with the class instance is achieved via passing a context in the form of the instance object into this function.
This is pretty awesome since if you chose to keep no context or no binding to the instance, all that was needed was to write a class to wrap the descriptor CPO and override its __get__() method to require no context.
This new class is what we call a decorator and is applied via the keyword #staticmethod
class C(object):
#staticmethod
def foo():
pass
The absence of context in the new wrapped CPO foo doesnt throw an error and can be verified as follows:
>>> C.__dict__['foo'].__get__(None, C)
<function foo at 0x17d0c30>
Use case of a static method is more of a namespacing and code maintainability one(taking it out of a class and making it available throughout the module etc).
It maybe better to write static methods rather than instance methods whenever possible, unless ofcourse you need to contexualise the methods(like access instance variables, class variables etc). One reason is to ease garbage collection by not keeping unwanted reference to objects.
that is an error.
first of all, first line should be like this (be careful of capitals)
class Test(object):
Whenever you call a method of a class, it gets itself as the first argument (hence the name self) and method_two gives this error
>>> a.method_two()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: method_two() takes no arguments (1 given)
The second one won't work because when you call it like that python internally tries to call it with the a_test instance as the first argument, but your method_two doesn't accept any arguments, so it wont work, you'll get a runtime error.
If you want the equivalent of a static method you can use a class method.
There's much less need for class methods in Python than static methods in languages like Java or C#. Most often the best solution is to use a method in the module, outside a class definition, those work more efficiently than class methods.
The call to method_two will throw an exception for not accepting the self parameter the Python runtime will automatically pass it.
If you want to create a static method in a Python class, decorate it with the staticmethod decorator.
Class Test(Object):
#staticmethod
def method_two():
print "Called method_two"
Test.method_two()
Please read this docs from the Guido First Class everything Clearly explained how Unbound, Bound methods are born.
Bound method = instance method
Unbound method = static method.
The definition of method_two is invalid. When you call method_two, you'll get TypeError: method_two() takes 0 positional arguments but 1 was given from the interpreter.
An instance method is a bounded function when you call it like a_test.method_two(). It automatically accepts self, which points to an instance of Test, as its first parameter. Through the self parameter, an instance method can freely access attributes and modify them on the same object.
Unbound Methods
Unbound methods are methods that are not bound to any particular class instance yet.
Bound Methods
Bound methods are the ones which are bound to a specific instance of a class.
As its documented here, self can refer to different things depending on the function is bound, unbound or static.
Take a look at the following example:
class MyClass:
def some_method(self):
return self # For the sake of the example
>>> MyClass().some_method()
<__main__.MyClass object at 0x10e8e43a0># This can also be written as:>>> obj = MyClass()
>>> obj.some_method()
<__main__.MyClass object at 0x10ea12bb0>
# Bound method call:
>>> obj.some_method(10)
TypeError: some_method() takes 1 positional argument but 2 were given
# WHY IT DIDN'T WORK?
# obj.some_method(10) bound call translated as
# MyClass.some_method(obj, 10) unbound method and it takes 2
# arguments now instead of 1
# ----- USING THE UNBOUND METHOD ------
>>> MyClass.some_method(10)
10
Since we did not use the class instance — obj — on the last call, we can kinda say it looks like a static method.
If so, what is the difference between MyClass.some_method(10) call and a call to a static function decorated with a #staticmethod decorator?
By using the decorator, we explicitly make it clear that the method will be used without creating an instance for it first. Normally one would not expect the class member methods to be used without the instance and accesing them can cause possible errors depending on the structure of the method.
Also, by adding the #staticmethod decorator, we are making it possible to be reached through an object as well.
class MyClass:
def some_method(self):
return self
#staticmethod
def some_static_method(number):
return number
>>> MyClass.some_static_method(10) # without an instance
10
>>> MyClass().some_static_method(10) # Calling through an instance
10
You can’t do the above example with the instance methods. You may survive the first one (as we did before) but the second one will be translated into an unbound call MyClass.some_method(obj, 10) which will raise a TypeError since the instance method takes one argument and you unintentionally tried to pass two.
Then, you might say, “if I can call static methods through both an instance and a class, MyClass.some_static_method and MyClass().some_static_method should be the same methods.” Yes!

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