I'm trying to find the best way to extend a class variable. Hopefully an example of the method I've come up with so far will make this clear.
class A(object):
foo = ['thing', 'another thing']
class B(A):
foo = A.foo + ['stuff', 'more stuff']
So I'm trying to make the subclass inherit and extend the parent's class variable. The method above works, but seems a bit kludgey. I'm open to any suggestion, including accomplishing something similar using a completely different approach.
Obviously I can continue to use this method if need be, but if there's a better way I'd like to find it.
Could use a metaclass:
class AutoExtendingFoo(type):
def __new__(cls, name, bases, attrs):
foo = []
for base in bases:
try:
foo.extend(getattr(base, 'foo'))
except AttributeError:
pass
try:
foo.extend(attrs.pop('foo_additions'))
except KeyError:
pass
attrs['foo'] = foo
return type.__new__(cls, name, bases, attrs)
class A(object):
__metaclass__ = AutoExtendingFoo
foo_additions = ['thing1', 'thing2']
# will have A.foo = ['thing1', 'thing2']
class B(A):
foo_additions = ['thing3', 'thing4']
# will have B.foo = ['thing1', 'thing2', 'thing3', 'thing4']
class C(A):
pass
# will have C.foo = ['thing1', 'thing2']
class D(B):
pass
# will have D.foo = ['thing1', 'thing2', 'thing3', 'thing4']
I definitively would go for instance-properties. (if I got it right, they are not bound to be static for your case?!)
>>> class A:
... @property
... def foo(self):
... return ['thin', 'another thing']
...
>>> class B(A):
... @property
... def foo(self):
... return super().foo + ['stuff', 'thing 3']
...
>>> B().foo
['thin', 'another thing', 'stuff', 'thing 3']