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Difference between _, __ and __xx__ in Python
When learning Python many people don‘t really understand why so much underlines in the beginning of the methods, sometimes
even in the end like __this__
! I‘ve already had to explain it so many times, it‘s time to document it.
One underline in the beginning
Python doesn‘t have real private methods, so one underline in the beginning of a method or attribute means you shouldn‘t access
this method, because it‘s not part of the API. It‘s very common when using properties:
class BaseForm(StrAndUnicode): ... def _get_errors(self): "Returns an ErrorDict for the data provided for the form" if self._errors is None: self.full_clean() return self._errors errors = property(_get_errors)
This snippet was taken from django source code (django/forms/forms.py). This means errors
is a property, and it‘s part of the API,
but the method this property calls, _get_errors
, is "private", so you shouldn‘t access it.
Two underlines in the beginning
This one causes a lot of confusion. It should not be used to mark a method as private, the goal here is to avoid your method to be
overridden by a subclass. Let‘s see an example:
class A(object): def __method(self): print "I‘m a method in A" def method(self): self.__method() a = A()a.method()
The output here is
$ python example.py I‘m a method in A
Fine, as we expected. Now let‘s subclass A
and customize __method
class B(A): def __method(self): print "I‘m a method in B"b = B()b.method()
and now the output is...
$ python example.pyI‘m a method in A
as you can see, A.method()
didn‘t call B.__method()
as we could expect. Actually this is the correct behavior for __
. So when you create
a method starting with __
you‘re saying that you don‘t want anybody to override it, it will be accessible just from inside the own class.
How python does it? Simple, it just renames the method. Take a look:
a = A()a._A__method() # never use this!! please!$ python example.pyI‘m a method in A
If you try to access a.__method()
it won‘t work either, as I said, __method
is just accessible inside the class itself.
Two underlines in the beginning and in the end
When you see a method like __this__
, the rule is simple: don‘t call it. Why? Because it means it‘s a method python calls, not you.
Take a look:
>>> name = "igor">>> name.__len__()4>>> len(name)4>>> number = 10>>> number.__add__(20)30>>> number + 2030
There is always an operator or native function that calls these magic methods. The idea here is to give you the ability to override
operators in your own classes. Sometimes it‘s just a hook python calls in specific situations. __init__()
, for example, is called when
the object is created so you can initialize it. __new__()
is called to build the instance, and so on...
Here‘s an example:
class CrazyNumber(object): def __init__(self, n): self.n = n def __add__(self, other): return self.n - other def __sub__(self, other): return self.n + other def __str__(self): return str(self.n)num = CrazyNumber(10)print num # 10print num + 5 # 5print num - 20 # 30
Another example:
class Room(object): def __init__(self): self.people = [] def add(self, person): self.people.append(person) def __len__(self): return len(self.people)room = Room()room.add("Igor")print len(room) # 1
The documentation covers all these special methods.
Difference between _, __ and __xx__ in Python