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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T23:06:59+00:00 2026-05-15T23:06:59+00:00

I have an esoteric question involving Python metaclasses. I am creating a Python package

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I have an esoteric question involving Python metaclasses. I am creating a Python package for web-server-side code that will make it easy to access arbitrary Python classes via client-side proxies. My proxy-generating code needs a catalog of all of the Python classes that I want to include in my API. To create this catalog, I am using the __metaclass__ special attribute to put a hook into the class-creation process. Specifically, all of the classes in the “published” API will subclass a particular base class, PythonDirectPublic, which itself has a __metaclass__ that has been set up to record information about the class creation.

So far so good. Where it gets complicated is that I want my PythonDirectPublic itself to inherit from a third-party class (enthought.traits.api.HasTraits). This third-party class also uses a __metaclass__.

So what’s the right way of managing two metaclasses? Should my metaclass be a subclass of Enthought’s metaclass? Or should I just invoke Enthought’s metaclass inside my metaclass’s __new__ method to get the type object that I will return? Or is there some other mystical incantation to use in this particular circumstance?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T23:06:59+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:06 pm

    Should my metaclass be a subclass of Enthought’s metaclass?

    I believe that is in fact your only choice. If the metaclass of a derived class is not a subclass of the metaclasses of all of its bases then Python will throw a TypeError when you try to create the derived class. So your metaclass for PythonDirectPublic should look something like

    class DerivedMetaClass(BaseMetaClass):
        def __new__(cls, name, bases, dct):
            # Do your custom memory allocation here, if any
    
            # Now let base metaclass do its memory allocation stuff
            return BaseMetaClass.__new__(cls, name, bases, dct)
    
        def __init__(cls, name, bases, dct):
            # Do your custom initialization here, if any
            # This, I assume, is where your catalog creation stuff takes place
    
            # Now let base metaclass do its initialization stuff
            super(DerivedMetaClass, cls).__init__(name, bases, dct)
    

    If you don’t have access to the definition of the metaclass for your third-party base class, you can replace BaseMetaClass with enthought.traits.api.HasTraits.__metaclass__. It’s wordy, but it will work.

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