multiple values for keyword argument
Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.python at pearwood.info
Sun Jan 30 04:36:39 EST 2011
On Sat, 29 Jan 2011 10:39:49 -0800, patty wrote:
> I am glad you said this. I have been avoiding understanding this
> 'self', just accepting it :} For the time being, since my programs I am
> creating are for my own use, I think I will make my own names up, that
> are descriptive to me as the programmer, it's all going to be
> interpreted anyway. And the other email equating to C's argv, etc. -
> now I get it.
That's a shame, because `self` is actually very simple once you
understand the basic principles of object-oriented programming.
What names would you choose? Unless you're writing descriptors, or using
class methods, both of which should be considered advanced usage (highly
advanced for descriptors, moderately so for class methods), it's not like
every method needs a different descriptive first argument. In English,
"self", "this", "me" or "instance" would be good names. What else would
you use?
The idea of method syntax is that you start with an instance of some
class:
mystring = "hello world" # an instance of the str class
In procedural languages like C or Pascal, you would call a function and
give the string as an argument. Python supports this programming model,
and uses it for built-ins like len:
len(mystring)
=> returns 11
Object oriented programming uses a different syntax. Instead of
function(instance)
as above, we take the instance argument outside the brackets. For example:
mystring.upper() # instead of upper(mystring)
=> returns "HELLO WORLD"
If there are any extra arguments needed, they go inside the brackets as
normal.
So far, this is just a change of syntax. It's like saying "The cat of my
brother's" vs. "my brother's cat" -- the meaning is the same, but the
syntax differs. The real advantages of object oriented programming and
methods come elsewhere (e.g. encapsulation and inheritance).
[Aside: when I was learning this, the hardest part I found was
remembering which things were functions, and which were methods.
I kept writing (wrongly!) things like:
"hello world".len()
upper("hello world")
Unfortunately there is no easy way to recognise what will be a
function like len, and which are methods like upper. That will
come with experience.
Back to function/procedural syntax versus object oriented syntax...
One difference, though, is when you write a method definition. Because
the method you write starts off life as an ordinary function, you need to
write it *as if* it were a function you call like len() above. Here's how
you might write a method in a class:
class MyClass:
def method(self, extra):
pass
When you then call the method:
instance = MyClass()
instance.method("something extra")
Python automatically changes the syntax for you, and passes two arguments
to the function as if you did this:
# pseudo-code
set self = instance
set extra = "something extra
extract "method" from MyClass
call method(self, extra)
We call the first argument something like "self" because it will ALWAYS
be the instance itself. Unlike a regular function, which can have
anything passed as the first argument, and therefore you should give it a
descriptive name, the method's first argument is provided automatically
for you and will always be the instance you started with.
I hope this helps.
--
Steven
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