Classes Without Boilerplate
Project description
attrs: Classes Without Boilerplate
attrs is the Python package that will bring back the joy of writing classes by relieving you from the drudgery of implementing object protocols (aka dunder methods).
Its main goal is to help you to write concise and correct software without slowing down your code.
For that, it gives you a class decorator and a way to declaratively define the attributes on that class:
>>> import attr
>>> @attr.s
... class SomeClass(object):
... a_number = attr.ib(default=42)
... list_of_numbers = attr.ib(factory=list)
...
... def hard_math(self, another_number):
... return self.a_number + sum(self.list_of_numbers) * another_number
>>> sc = SomeClass(1, [1, 2, 3])
>>> sc
SomeClass(a_number=1, list_of_numbers=[1, 2, 3])
>>> sc.hard_math(3)
19
>>> sc == SomeClass(1, [1, 2, 3])
True
>>> sc != SomeClass(2, [3, 2, 1])
True
>>> attr.asdict(sc)
{'a_number': 1, 'list_of_numbers': [1, 2, 3]}
>>> SomeClass()
SomeClass(a_number=42, list_of_numbers=[])
>>> C = attr.make_class("C", ["a", "b"])
>>> C("foo", "bar")
C(a='foo', b='bar')
After declaring your attributes attrs gives you:
a concise and explicit overview of the class’s attributes,
a nice human-readable __repr__,
a complete set of comparison methods (equality and ordering),
an initializer,
and much more,
without writing dull boilerplate code again and again and without runtime performance penalties.
On Python 3.6 and later, you can often even drop the calls to attr.ib() by using type annotations.
This gives you the power to use actual classes with actual types in your code instead of confusing tuples or confusingly behaving namedtuples. Which in turn encourages you to write small classes that do one thing well. Never again violate the single responsibility principle just because implementing __init__ et al is a painful drag.
Getting Help
Please use the python-attrs tag on StackOverflow to get help.
Answering questions of your fellow developers is also a great way to help the project!
Project Information
attrs is released under the MIT license, its documentation lives at Read the Docs, the code on GitHub, and the latest release on PyPI. It’s rigorously tested on Python 2.7, 3.5+, and PyPy.
We collect information on third-party extensions in our wiki. Feel free to browse and add your own!
If you’d like to contribute to attrs you’re most welcome and we’ve written a little guide to get you started!
attrs for Enterprise
Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription.
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Release Information
20.3.0 (2020-11-05)
Backward-incompatible Changes
attr.define(), attr.frozen(), attr.mutable(), and attr.field() remain provisional.
This release does not change change anything about them and they are already used widely in production though.
If you wish to use them together with mypy, you can simply drop this plugin into your project.
Feel free to provide feedback to them in the linked issue #668.
We will release the attrs namespace once we have the feeling that the APIs have properly settled. #668
Changes
attr.s() now has a field_transformer hook that is called for all Attributes and returns a (modified or updated) list of Attribute instances. attr.asdict() has a value_serializer hook that can change the way values are converted. Both hooks are meant to help with data (de-)serialization workflows. #653
kw_only=True now works on Python 2. #700
attr.asdict() and attr.astuple() now treat frozensets like sets with regards to the retain_collection_types argument. #704
The type stubs for attr.s() and attr.make_class() are not missing the collect_by_mro argument anymore. #711
Credits
attrs is written and maintained by Hynek Schlawack.
The development is kindly supported by Variomedia AG.
A full list of contributors can be found in GitHub’s overview.
It’s the spiritual successor of characteristic and aspires to fix some of it clunkiness and unfortunate decisions. Both were inspired by Twisted’s FancyEqMixin but both are implemented using class decorators because subclassing is bad for you, m’kay?
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