Python 2.6: Determining if a method is inherited

Fuzzyman fuzzyman at gmail.com
Sun Oct 5 14:52:27 EDT 2008


Hello all,

I may well be being dumb (it has happened before), but I'm struggling
to fix some code breakage with Python 2.6.

I have some code that looks for the '__lt__' method on a class:

if hasattr(clr, '__lt__'):

However - in Python 2.6 object has grown a default implementation of
'__lt__', so this test always returns True.

>>> class X(object): pass
...
>>> X.__lt__
<method-wrapper '__lt__' of type object at 0xa15cf0>
>>> X.__lt__ == object.__lt__
False

So how do I tell if the X.__lt__ is inherited from object? I can look
in the '__dict__' of the class - but that doesn't tell me if X
inherits '__lt__' from a base class other than object. (Looking inside
the method wrapper repr with a regex is not an acceptable answer...)

Some things I have tried:


>>> X.__lt__.__self__
<class '__main__.X'>
>>> dir(X.__lt__)
['__call__', '__class__', '__cmp__', '__delattr__', '__doc__',
'__format__', '__getattribute__', '__hash__', '__init__', '__name__',
'__new__', '__objclass__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', '__repr__',
'__self__', '__setattr__', '__sizeof__', '__str__',
'__subclasshook__']
>>> X.__lt__.__func__
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'method-wrapper' object has no attribute '__func__'

Michael Foord
--
http://www.ironpythoninaction.com/



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