Why inspect.isclass says iter() a class?
Arup Rakshit
ar at zeit.io
Wed Apr 10 15:25:36 EDT 2019
Well. I thought so far, all class in python is defined as CamelCase. A function can be a class to is something I am surprised. So does this mean, any callable function if produce an instance is called class in Python?
Thanks,
Arup Rakshit
ar at zeit.io
> On 11-Apr-2019, at 12:53 AM, Calvin Spealman <cspealma at redhat.com> wrote:
>
> Because it is. Many things are classes. calling itertools.chain(a, b) creates an itertools.chain instance that you can iterate over. What else did you think it would be?
>
> On Wed, Apr 10, 2019 at 3:17 PM Arup Rakshit <ar at zeit.io> wrote:
> From docs https://docs.python.org/3/library/itertools.html#itertools.chain I see that itertools.chain is defined as a function. But then why inspect.isclass(chain) is saying it as class.
>
> from itertools import chain
>
> inspect.isclass(chain)
> # True
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Arup Rakshit
> ar at zeit.io
>
>
>
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