So I have a class, which I'm using as a local namespace. I have some static functions in the class, but they can't access the class scope variables. Why is this?
class Foo:
foo_string = "I am a foo"
@staticmethod
def foo():
print foo_string
>>> Foo.foo()
[Stack Trace]
NameError: global name 'foo_string' is not defined
Any thoughts?
Python doesn't let class variables fall into scope this way, there are two ways to do this, the first is to use a class method:
Which I would argue is the best solution.
The second is to access by name:
Do note that in general, using a class as a namespace isn't the best way to do it, simply use a module with top-level functions instead, as this acts more as you want to.
The reason for the lack of scoping like this is mainly due to Python's dynamic nature, how would it work when you insert a function into the class? It would have to have special behaviour added to it conditionally, which would be extremely awkward to implement and potentially fragile. It also helps keep things explicit rather than implicit - it's clear what is a class variable as opposed to a local variable.