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Mastering Object-oriented Python

Mastering Object-oriented Python

By : Steven F. Lott
4.2 (13)
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Mastering Object-oriented Python

Mastering Object-oriented Python

4.2 (13)
By: Steven F. Lott

Overview of this book

This practical example-oriented guide will teach you advanced concepts of object-oriented programming in Python. This book will present detailed examples of almost all of the special method names that support creating classes that integrate seamlessly with Python's built-in features. It will show you how to use JSON, YAML, Pickle, CSV, XML, Shelve, and SQL to create persistent objects and transmit objects between processes. The book also covers logging, warnings, unit testing, configuration files, and how to work with the command line. This book is broken into three major parts: Pythonic Classes via Special Methods; Persistence and Serialization; Testing, Debugging, Deploying, and Maintaining. The special methods are broken down into several focus areas: initialization, basics, attribute access, callables, contexts, containers, collections, numbers, and more advanced techniques such as decorators and mixin classes.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
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Mastering Object-oriented Python
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Some Preliminaries
1
Index

The __new__() method and immutable objects


One use case for the __new__() method is to initialize objects that are otherwise immutable. The __new__() method is where our code can build an uninitialized object. This allows processing before the __init__() method is called to set the attribute values of the object.

The __new__() method is used to extend the immutable classes where the __init__() method can't easily be overridden.

The following is a class that does not work. We'll define a version of float that carries around information on units:

class Float_Fail( float ):
    def __init__( self, value, unit ):
        super().__init__( value )
        self.unit = unit

We're trying (improperly) to initialize an immutable object.

The following is what happens when we try to use this class definition:

>>> s2 = Float_Fail( 6.5, "knots" )
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: float() takes at most 1 argument (2 given)

From this, we see...

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Mastering Object-oriented Python
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