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@staticmethod和@classmethod之间的区别

#@staticmethod和@classmethod之间的区别| 来源: 网络整理| 查看: 265

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What is the difference between a method decorated with @staticmethod and one decorated with @classmethod?

推荐答案

Maybe a bit of example code will help: Notice the difference in the call signatures of foo, class_foo and static_foo:

class A(object): def foo(self, x): print(f"executing foo({self}, {x})") @classmethod def class_foo(cls, x): print(f"executing class_foo({cls}, {x})") @staticmethod def static_foo(x): print(f"executing static_foo({x})") a = A()

Below is the usual way an object instance calls a method. The object instance, a, is implicitly passed as the first argument.

a.foo(1) # executing foo(, 1)

With classmethods, the class of the object instance is implicitly passed as the first argument instead of self.

a.class_foo(1) # executing class_foo(, 1)

You can also call class_foo using the class. In fact, if you define something to be a classmethod, it is probably because you intend to call it from the class rather than from a class instance. A.foo(1) would have raised a TypeError, but A.class_foo(1) works just fine:

A.class_foo(1) # executing class_foo(, 1)

One use people have found for class methods is to create inheritable alternative constructors.

With staticmethods, neither self (the object instance) nor cls (the class) is implicitly passed as the first argument. They behave like plain functions except that you can call them from an instance or the class:

a.static_foo(1) # executing static_foo(1) A.static_foo('hi') # executing static_foo(hi)

Staticmethods are used to group functions which have some logical connection with a class to the class.

foo is just a function, but when you call a.foo you don't just get the function, you get a "partially applied" version of the function with the object instance a bound as the first argument to the function. foo expects 2 arguments, while a.foo only expects 1 argument.

a is bound to foo. That is what is meant by the term "bound" below:

print(a.foo) #

With a.class_foo, a is not bound to class_foo, rather the class A is bound to class_foo.

print(a.class_foo) #

Here, with a staticmethod, even though it is a method, a.static_foo just returns a good 'ole function with no arguments bound. static_foo expects 1 argument, and a.static_foo expects 1 argument too.

print(a.static_foo) #

And of course the same thing happens when you call static_foo with the class A instead.

print(A.static_foo) # 其他推荐答案

A staticmethod is a method that knows nothing about the class or instance it was called on. It just gets the arguments that were passed, no implicit first argument. It is basically useless in Python -- you can just use a module function instead of a staticmethod.

A classmethod, on the other hand, is a method that gets passed the class it was called on, or the class of the instance it was called on, as first argument. This is useful when you want the method to be a factory for the class: since it gets the actual class it was called on as first argument, you can always instantiate the right class, even when subclasses are involved. Observe for instance how dict.fromkeys(), a classmethod, returns an instance of the subclass when called on a subclass:

>>> class DictSubclass(dict): ... def __repr__(self): ... return "DictSubclass" ... >>> dict.fromkeys("abc") {'a': None, 'c': None, 'b': None} >>> DictSubclass.fromkeys("abc") DictSubclass >>> 其他推荐答案

Basically @classmethod makes a method whose first argument is the class it's called from (rather than the class instance), @staticmethod does not have any implicit arguments.



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