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Home/ Questions/Q 906459
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T16:23:36+00:00 2026-05-15T16:23:36+00:00

I am relatively new to Python and was hoping someone could explain the following

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I am relatively new to Python and was hoping someone could explain the following to me:

class MyClass:
  Property1 = 1
  Property2 = 2

print MyClass.Property1 # 1
mc = MyClass()
print mc.Property1 # 1

Why can I access Property1 both statically and through a MyClass instance?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T16:23:36+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:23 pm

    The code

    class MyClass:
      Property1 = 1
    

    creates a class MyClass which has a dict:

    >>> MyClass.__dict__
    {'Property1': 1, '__doc__': None, '__module__': '__main__'}
    

    Notice the key-value pair 'Property1': 1.
    When you say MyClass.Property1, Python looks in the dict MyClass.__dict__ for the key Property1 and if it finds it, returns the associated value 1.

    >>> MyClass.Property1
    1
    

    When you create an instance of the class,

    >>> mc = MyClass()
    

    a dict for the instance is also created:

    >>> mc.__dict__
    {}
    

    Notice this dict is empty. When you say mc.Property1, Python first looks in mc.__dict__ for the 'Property1' key. Since it does not find it there, it looks in the dict of mc‘s class, that is, MyClass.__dict__.

    >>> mc.Property1
    1
    

    Note that there is much more to the story of Python attribute access. (I haven’t mentioned the important rules concerning descriptors, for instance.) But the above tells you the rule for most common cases of attribute access.

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