On Sun, 24 Aug 2008 23:56:27 -0700, Hussein B wrote: > On Aug 24, 7:12 pm, Steven D'Aprano <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > cybersource.com.au> wrote:
>> >> I noted that Python encourage the usage of: -- obj.prop = data >> >> x = obj.prop >> >> -- >> >> to set/get an object's property value. What if I want to run some >> >> logic upon setting/getting a property? What is Python preferred >> >> method to do so (using the new feature 'property')? I don't think >> >> __getattr__ and __setattr__ are practical (I have to code the >> >> property name into them). ... >> I think the actual answer to his question is that properties are the >> preferred way to "run some logic upon setting/getting" an attribute, >> that is, to implement getters and setters. >> >> Hussein, the Java habit of writing setters and getters for everything >> isn't considered good practice in Python, but if you need them, that's >> exactly what the property() function is for. >> >> -- >> Steven > > Thank you Steven :) > -- > public class JClass { > private int answer; // property > } > -- > class PyClass(object): > doc __init__(self): > self.answer = None > -- > AFAIUY (understand you), what it is called a property in Java, it is > called an attribute in Python? > Why Python encourages direct access to object's attributes? aren't > setters/getters considered vital in OOP (encapsulation)? > Thank you all for your time and help. Hussein, first let me ask you to please stop using "--" as a separator around code. Many News clients, including mine, expect -- on a line by itself to mean "everything from here on is the writer's signature", and consequently that makes it harder to reply correctly to your posts. I had to manually copy and paste your text in order to quote it. Perhaps you could use === or +++ or *** as a separator? Now, back to your actual question... I'm not a Java coder, so the following should be read as my opinion. Python attributes are equivalent to Java _public_ properties, not private. If you can write: public class JClass { public int answer; } then that would be more or less equivalent to Python's class PyClass(object): def __init__(self): self.answer = None Yes, Python does encourage direct access to an object's attributes. The Python philosophy is "we're all adults here". If coders wish to shoot themselves in the foot by accessing clearly marked private attributes, then the language can't stop them and shouldn't try. It's easy to bypass such private/public protection in C++, and harder, but still possible, in Java. The Python development team is certainly aware that such a tactic introduces some costs, by reducing encapsulation, but it also has many benefits (e.g. less boilerplate getter/setter methods, faster development time). It is their belief that such costs are worth paying in order to get the benefits. That's the philosophy of the language. Python is not trying to be Java, and Java should not try to be Python. Python does not enforce private attributes. By convention attributes starting with a single underscore are considered "private -- don't touch unless you know what you're doing". Attributes starting with a double underscore are "really private", and Python mangles the name to (almost) enforce it. Example: def Parrot(object): colour = 'red' # public, free to use _windspan = 15 # semi-private, use it at your own risk __species = 'Norwegian Blue' # mangled to _Parrot__species But it's quite rare to see double-underscore "really private" attributes in Python code. It is considered to go against the spirit of the language. I'm told that in Java it is quite difficult to change a class from using public attributes to getters/setters, and therefore many Java developers prefer to use getters/setters right from the beginning. But in Python it is very easy to change from a bare attribute to a computed property without messing up calling code. So there's no advantage to writing something like this: class Foo(object): def __init__(self): self.__x = None # private attribute def setx(self, x): # setter self.__x = x def getx(self): # getter return self.__x x = property(getx, setx) That is considered a waste of time in Python circles and is strongly discouraged. You should read "Python Is Not Java" and "Java Is Not Python Either": http://dirtsimple.org/2004/12/python-is-not-java.html http://dirtsimple.org/2004/12/java-is-not-python-either.html -- Steven -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list