Classmethods are evil

Gabriel Genellina gagsl-py2 at yahoo.com.ar
Sat May 17 01:33:13 EDT 2008


En Sat, 17 May 2008 01:01:50 -0300, Ivan Illarionov  
<ivan.illarionov at gmail.com> escribió:

> After re-reading "Python is not Java" I finally came to conclusion that
> classmethods in Python are a very Bad Thing.
>
> I can't see any use-case of them that couldn't be re-written more clearly
> with methods of metaclass or plain functions.

A good use case for class methods are alternate constructors, like  
dict.from_keys. I don't think an alternate constructor would be more clear  
being a method of the metaclass - actually it belongs to the class itself,  
not to its metaclass.
Metaclass methods are harder to find; they don't show in dir(instance) nor  
dir(class).
Also the resolution order is harder to grasp for metaclasses - but this  
may be just lack of usage from my part...

> They have the following issues:
> 1. You mix instance-level and class-level functionality in one place
> making your code a mess.

Not necesarily; some classmethods are naturally tied to the class itself,  
not to the metaclass (like the constructor example above). But yes, *some*  
classmethods could be written as methods of their metaclass instead - but  
that doesn't always make sense.

> 2. They are slower than metaclass methods or plain functions.

Hu? How did you come to that?
I've done a small test and a class method wins by a very minuscule but  
consistent advantage over a metaclass method:

class A(object):
     color = "red"

     @classmethod
     def foo(cls, x):
         return getattr(cls, x)

class MetaB(type):
     def foo(self, x):
         return getattr(self, x)

class B(object):
     __metaclass__ = MetaB
     color = "red"

C:\TEMP>python -m timeit -s "from meta3 import A,B;a,b=A(),B()"  
"A.foo('color')"
1000000 loops, best of 3: 1.19 usec per loop

C:\TEMP>python -m timeit -s "from meta3 import A,B;a,b=A(),B()"  
"B.foo('color')"
1000000 loops, best of 3: 1.2 usec per loop


-- 
Gabriel Genellina




More information about the Python-list mailing list