On 28/06/2011 12:51, R. David Murray wrote: > On Tue, 28 Jun 2011 11:54:39 +0100, Michael Foord<fuzzyman at voidspace.org.uk> wrote: >> On 28/06/2011 11:44, Fred Drake wrote: >>> But "callable attributes" aren't the same thing as methods; most are methods, >>> but not all. Sometimes, they're data used by the object. The fact that >>> data attributes can be callable is irrelevant. >> Added to which there are other descriptors, notably property, that are >> not directly callable but are not provided as normal "data attributes" >> (although the access syntax is the same). Properties are much closer to >> methods as they are implemented on the class and fetched via the >> descriptor protocol. Instead of "data attributes" I prefer the term >> "instance attributes" although that doesn't include "class attributes" >> (or more precisely it doesn't cover "class attributes that aren't >> descriptors"). > Also, instances can have methods as instance attributes. > > Trying to use 'instance attributes' for non-method attributes is a bad > idea, I think. I would use instance attributes for members that are held in the instance dict (or have specific slots). As this can't be a normal "method" (it could be any object including a callable one - but won't be a standard method descriptor) it seems uncontroversial. (Or more to the point it seems to be *precise* in its meaning in the context of the Python data model.) What do you mean by "instances can have methods as instance attributes"? Once you attach a bound method directly to an instance it becomes a slightly different beast I think. (On top of which that is pretty rare behaviour.) > Given that there is no one thing that covers all non-method > attributes, I suspect 'non-method attributes' is as good as > we're going to manage. Hehe, yeah - that's not bad... It's hard to see how it could be misunderstood too. Michael > -- > R. David Murray http://www.bitdance.com -- http://www.voidspace.org.uk/ May you do good and not evil May you find forgiveness for yourself and forgive others May you share freely, never taking more than you give. -- the sqlite blessing http://www.sqlite.org/different.html
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