In Python2.7 this code can work very well, __getattr__
in MetaTable
will run. But in Python 3.5 it doesn't work.
class MetaTable(type):
def __getattr__(cls, key):
temp = key.split("__")
name = temp[0]
alias = None
if len(temp) > 1:
alias = temp[1]
return cls(name, alias)
class Table(object):
__metaclass__ = MetaTable
def __init__(self, name, alias=None):
self._name = name
self._alias = alias
d = Table
d.student__s
But in Python 3.5 I get an attribute error instead:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/wyx/project/python3/sql/dd.py", line 31, in <module>
d.student__s
AttributeError: type object 'Table' has no attribute 'student__s'
Python 3 changed how you specify a metaclass,
__metaclass__
is no longer checked.Use
metaclass=...
in the class signature:Demo:
If you need to provide support for both Python 2 and 3 in your codebase, you can use the
six.with_metaclass()
baseclass generator or the@six.add_metaclass()
class decorator to specify the metaclass.