How do you access other class variables from a list comprehension within the class definition? The following works in Python 2 but fails in Python 3:
class Foo:
x = 5
y = [x for i in range(1)]
Python 3.11 gives the error:
NameError: name 'x' is not defined
Trying Foo.x doesn’t work either. Any ideas on how to do this in Python 3?
A slightly more complicated motivating example:
from collections import namedtuple
class StateDatabase:
State = namedtuple('State', ['name', 'capital'])
db = [State(*args) for args in [
['Alabama', 'Montgomery'],
['Alaska', 'Juneau'],
# ...
]]
In this example, apply() would have been a decent workaround, but it is sadly removed from Python 3.
Class scope and list, set or dictionary comprehensions, as well as generator expressions, do not mix.
The why; or, the official word on this
You cannot access the class scope from functions, list comprehensions or generator expressions enclosed in that scope; they act as if that scope does not exist. In Python 2, list comprehensions were implemented using a shortcut so actually could access the class scope, but in Python 3 they got their own scope (as they should have had all along) and thus your example breaks. Other comprehension types have their own scope regardless of Python version, so a similar example with a set or dict comprehension would break in Python 2.
More details
In Python 3, list comprehensions were given a proper scope (local namespace) of their own, to prevent their local variables bleeding over into the surrounding scope (see List comprehension rebinds names even after scope of comprehension. Is this right?). That’s great when using such a list comprehension in a module or in a function, but in classes, scoping is a little, uhm, strange.
This is documented in pep 227:
and in the
classcompound statement documentation:Emphasis mine; the execution frame is the temporary scope.
Because the scope is repurposed as the attributes on a class object, allowing it to be used as a nonlocal scope as well leads to undefined behaviour; what would happen if a class method referred to
xas a nested scope variable, then manipulatesFoo.xas well, for example? More importantly, what would that mean for subclasses ofFoo? Python has to treat a class scope differently as it is very different from a function scope.Last, but definitely not least, the linked Naming and binding section in the Execution model documentation mentions class scopes explicitly:
The (small) exception; or, why one part may still work
There’s one part of a comprehension or generator expression that executes in the surrounding scope, regardless of Python version. That would be the expression for the outermost iterable. In your example, it’s the
range(1):Thus, using
xin that expression would not throw an error:This only applies to the outermost iterable; if a comprehension has multiple
forclauses, the iterables for innerforclauses are evaluated in the comprehension’s scope:This design decision was made in order to throw an error at genexp creation time instead of iteration time when creating the outermost iterable of a generator expression throws an error, or when the outermost iterable turns out not to be iterable. Comprehensions share this behavior for consistency.
Looking under the hood; or, way more detail than you ever wanted
You can see this all in action using the
dismodule. I’m using Python 3.3 in the following examples, because it adds qualified names that neatly identify the code objects we want to inspect. The bytecode produced is otherwise functionally identical to Python 3.2.To create a class, Python essentially takes the whole suite that makes up the class body (so everything indented one level deeper than the
class <name>:line), and executes that as if it were a function:The first
LOAD_CONSTthere loads a code object for theFooclass body, then makes that into a function, and calls it. The result of that call is then used to create the namespace of the class, its__dict__. So far so good.The thing to note here is that the bytecode contains a nested code object; in Python, class definitions, functions, comprehensions and generators all are represented as code objects that contain not only bytecode, but also structures that represent local variables, constants, variables taken from globals, and variables taken from the nested scope. The compiled bytecode refers to those structures and the python interpreter knows how to access those given the bytecodes presented.
The important thing to remember here is that Python creates these structures at compile time; the
classsuite is a code object (<code object Foo at 0x10a436030, file "<stdin>", line 2>) that is already compiled.Let’s inspect that code object that creates the class body itself; code objects have a
co_constsstructure:The above bytecode creates the class body. The function is executed and the resulting
locals()namespace, containingxandyis used to create the class (except that it doesn’t work becausexisn’t defined as a global). Note that after storing5inx, it loads another code object; that’s the list comprehension; it is wrapped in a function object just like the class body was; the created function takes a positional argument, therange(1)iterable to use for its looping code, cast to an iterator. As shown in the bytecode,range(1)is evaluated in the class scope.From this you can see that the only difference between a code object for a function or a generator, and a code object for a comprehension is that the latter is executed immediately when the parent code object is executed; the bytecode simply creates a function on the fly and executes it in a few small steps.
Python 2.x uses inline bytecode there instead, here is output from Python 2.7:
No code object is loaded, instead a
FOR_ITERloop is run inline. So in Python 3.x, the list generator was given a proper code object of its own, which means it has its own scope.However, the comprehension was compiled together with the rest of the python source code when the module or script was first loaded by the interpreter, and the compiler does not consider a class suite a valid scope. Any referenced variables in a list comprehension must look in the scope surrounding the class definition, recursively. If the variable wasn’t found by the compiler, it marks it as a global. Disassembly of the list comprehension code object shows that
xis indeed loaded as a global:This chunk of bytecode loads the first argument passed in (the
range(1)iterator), and just like the Python 2.x version usesFOR_ITERto loop over it and create its output.Had we defined
xin thefoofunction instead,xwould be a cell variable (cells refer to nested scopes):The
LOAD_DEREFwill indirectly loadxfrom the code object cell objects:The actual referencing looks the value up from the current frame data structures, which were initialized from a function object’s
.__closure__attribute. Since the function created for the comprehension code object is discarded again, we do not get to inspect that function’s closure. To see a closure in action, we’d have to inspect a nested function instead:So, to summarize:
A workaround; or, what to do about it
If you were to create an explicit scope for the
xvariable, like in a function, you can use class-scope variables for a list comprehension:The ‘temporary’
yfunction can be called directly; we replace it when we do with its return value. Its scope is considered when resolvingx:Of course, people reading your code will scratch their heads over this a little; you may want to put a big fat comment in there explaining why you are doing this.
The best work-around is to just use
__init__to create an instance variable instead:and avoid all the head-scratching, and questions to explain yourself. For your own concrete example, I would not even store the
namedtupleon the class; either use the output directly (don’t store the generated class at all), or use a global:PEP 709, part of Python 3.12, changes some of this all again
In Python 3.12, comprehensions have been made a lot more efficient by removing the nested function and inlining the loop, while still maintaining a separate scope. The details of how this was done are outlined in PEP 709 – Inlined comprehensions, but the long and short of it is that instead of creating a new function object and then calling it, with
LOAD_CONST,MAKE_FUNCTIONandCALLbytecodes, any clashing names used in the loop are first moved to the stack before executing the comprehension bytecode inline.It is important to note that this change only affects performance and interaction with the class scope has not changed. You still can’t access names created in a class scope, for the reasons outlined above.
Using Python 3.12.0b4 the bytecode for the
Fooclass now looks like this:Here, the most important bytecode is the one at offset 34:
This takes the value for the variable
xin the local scope and pushes it on the stack, and then clears the name. If there is no variablexin the current scope, this stores a CNULLvalue on the stack. The name is now gone from the local scope now until the bytecode at offset 66 is reached:This restores
xto what it was before the list comprehension; if aNULLwas stored on the stack to indicate that there was no variable namedx, then there still won’t be a variablexafter this bytecode has been executed.The rest of the bytecode between the
LOAD_FAST_AND_CLEARandSTORE_FASTcalls is more or less the same it was before, withSWAPbytecodes used to access the iterator for therange(1)object instead ofLOAD_FAST (.0)in the function bytecode in earlier Python 3.x versions.