While browsing some Python code and docs, I recently got the idea for, and wrote, these two simple convenience functions for introspecting Python objects.
The function oa (for object attributes) can be used to get the attributes of any Python object:
def oa(o): for at in dir(o): print at,(The reason why I don't just type dir(o) instead of using oa(o) (for some object o), is because in IPython (though not in vanilla Python), doing just dir(o) displays the attributes in a vertical line, so the output scrolls off the screen if there are many attributes, while the oa() function prints them horizontally, so the output fits in a few lines without scrolling off.)
And running oa() a few times in the Python shell, gives (shell prompts removed):
oa({}) __class__ __cmp__ __contains__ __delattr__ __delitem__ __doc__ __eq__ __format__ __ge__ __getattribute__ __getitem__ __gt__ __hash__ __init__ __iter__ __le__ __len__ __lt__ __ne__ __new__ __reduce__ __reduce_ex__ __repr__ __setattr__ __setitem__ __sizeof__ __str__ __subclasshook__ clear copy fromkeys get has_key items iteritems iterkeys itervalues keys pop popitem setdefault update values viewitems viewkeys viewvalues # object attributes of a list: oa([]) __add__ __class__ __contains__ __delattr__ __delitem__ __delslice__ __doc__ __eq__ __format__ __ge__ __getattribute__ __getitem__ __getslice__ __gt__ __hash__ __iadd__ __imul__ __init__ __iter__ __le__ __len__ __lt__ __mul__ __ne__ __new__ __reduce__ __reduce_ex__ __repr__ __reversed__ __rmul__ __setattr__ __setitem__ __setslice__ __sizeof__ __str__ __subclasshook__ append count extend index insert pop remove reverse sort # object attributes of an int: oa(1) __abs__ __add__ __and__ __class__ __cmp__ __coerce__ __delattr__ __div__ __divmod__ __doc__ __float__ __floordiv__ __format__ __getattribute__ __getnewargs__ __hash__ __hex__ __index__ __init__ __int__ __invert__ __long__ __lshift__ __mod__ __mul__ __neg__ __new__ __nonzero__ __oct__ __or__ __pos__ __pow__ __radd__ __rand__ __rdiv__ __rdivmod__ __reduce__ __reduce_ex__ __repr__ __rfloordiv__ __rlshift__ __rmod__ __rmul__ __ror__ __rpow__ __rrshift__ __rshift__ __rsub__ __rtruediv__ __rxor__ __setattr__ __sizeof__ __str__ __sub__ __subclasshook__ __truediv__ __trunc__ __xor__ bit_length conjugate denominator imag numerator real
The function oar (for object attributes regular, meaning exclude the special or "dunder" methods, i.e. those starting and ending with a double underscore) can be used to get only the "regular" attributes of any python object.
def oar(o): for at in dir(o): if not at.startswith('__') and not at.endswith('__'): print at,The output from running it:
# regular object attributes of a dict: oar({}) clear copy fromkeys get has_key items iteritems iterkeys itervalues keys pop popitem setdefault update values viewitems viewkeys viewvalues # regular object attributes of an int: oar(1) bit_length conjugate denominator imag numerator real # regular object attributes of a string: oar('') _formatter_field_name_split _formatter_parser capitalize center count decode encode endswith expandtabs find format index isalnum isalpha isdigit islower isspace istitle isupper join ljust lower lstrip partition replace rfind rindex rjust rpartition rsplit rstrip split splitlines startswith strip swapcase title translate upper zfill
Here are some more posts about Python introspection.
Enjoy.
- Vasudev Ram - Online Python training and consulting Get updates (via Gumroad) on my forthcoming apps and content. Jump to posts: Python * DLang * xtopdf Subscribe to my blog by email My ActiveState Code recipesFollow me on: LinkedIn * Twitter Managed WordPress Hosting by FlyWheel
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