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Home/ Questions/Q 530365
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T09:11:20+00:00 2026-05-13T09:11:20+00:00

I played around with overloading or masking classes in Python. Do the following code

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I played around with overloading or masking classes in Python. Do the following code examples create equivalent classes?

class CustASample(object):
    def __init__(self):
        self.__class__.__name__ = "Sample"

    def doSomething(self):
        dummy = 1

and

class Sample(object):
    def doSomething(self):
        dummy = 1

EDIT: From the comments and and the good answer by gs, it occured to me, that I really wanted to ask: What “attributes” make these classes differ?

Because

>>> dir(a) == dir(b)
True

and

>>> print Sample
<class '__main__.Sample'>
>>> print CustASample
<class '__main__.Sample'>

but

>>> Sample == CustASample
False
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T09:11:20+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:11 am

    No, they are still different.

    a = CustASample()
    b = Sample()
    a.__class__ is b.__class__
    -> False
    

    Here’s how you could do it:

    class A(object):
        def __init__(self):
            self.__class__ = B
    
    class B(object):
        def bark(self):
           print "Wuff!"
    
    a = A()
    b = B()
    a.__class__ is b.__class__
    -> True
    
    a.bark()
    -> Wuff!
    
    b.bark()
    -> Wuff!
    

    Usually you would do it in the __new__ method instead of in __init__:

    class C(object):
        def __new__(cls):
            return A()
    

    To answer your updated question:

    >>> a = object()
    >>> b = object()
    >>> a == b
    False
    

    Why would a not be equal to b, since both are just plain objects without attributes?

    Well, that answer is simple. The == operator invokes __eq__, if it’s available. But unless you define it yourself it’s not. Instead of it a is b gets used.

    is compares the ids of the objects. (In CPython the memory address.) You can get the id of an object like this:

    >>> id(a)
    156808
    
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