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Home/ Questions/Q 980959
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T04:28:00+00:00 2026-05-16T04:28:00+00:00

i have a python class like so: class TAG_Short(NBTTag): def __init__(self, value=None): self.name =

  • 0

i have a python class like so:

class TAG_Short(NBTTag):
    def __init__(self, value=None):
        self.name = None
        self.value = value

    def __repr__(self):
        return "TAG_Short: %i" % self.value

This tag is filled out at runtime, but i’d also like to be able to use it like:

mytag = TAG_Short(3)
mycalc = 3 + ( mytag % 2) / mytag

is there any method i need to add to the tag to allow me to use it as a valid numeric type?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T04:28:01+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 4:28 am

    I see– what you would like is to have something like a __as_number__ method you can define in TAG_Short, which would allow you to return a number which is then used in any place where a ValueError would be about to be raised. I have no idea if there is any way to do something like that, short of implementing that metafeature yourself.

    What you can do is define __add__, __radd__, __mul__, __rmul__, etc (you must define every numeric method if you want your object to truly behave like a number in every situation), and have each of them return the result of doing the desired operation with what you consider to be the number representation of the TAG_Short object.

    If you find yourself doing this often enough, you may consider implementing the metafeature you describe (or first looking for a stable implementation to reuse). It would be quite feasible in Python. I think it might even be as easy as a good-old-fashioned class to be inherited from (untested code follows), with something kind of like:

    class AbstractNumberImpersonator:
        # child classes should define method .to_number()
        def __add__( self, other ):
            return self.to_number() + other
        __radd__ = __add__
        def __mul__( self, other ):
            return self.to_number() * other
        __rmul__ = __mul__
        # etc - implement all the others in the same fashion
    

    Then you could do something like:

    class TAG_Short(NBTTag,AbstractNumberImpersonator):
        def __init__(self, value=None):
            self.name = None
            self.value = value
    
        def __repr__(self):
            return "TAG_Short: %i" % self.value
    
        def to_number(self):
            return self.value
    
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