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Home/ Questions/Q 7517043
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T01:19:16+00:00 2026-05-30T01:19:16+00:00

If I have the following code class One: scope = ‘first_scope’ class Two: scope

  • 0

If I have the following code

 class One:
   scope = 'first_scope'

 class Two:
   scope = 'second_scope'
   contained_object = One()

Is it possible for me given a reference to contained_object to determine through reflection whether it and the object referencing it have the same scope?

Thanks

EDIT: Apologies if the question was unclear, I wasn’t quite sure in python terminology how to ask it. I’ve contrived a sort of sample

An example might be

 def sample(input):
     #code in here to find out if input.scope
     # matches a.scope without having a reference to it

 a = Two()
 a.scope = 'first scope'
 a.contained_object.scope = 'will not match'
 sample(a.contained_object)
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T01:19:19+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 1:19 am

    It’s doable, you can do something like:

    import gc
    
        class A(object):
            scope = 'a'
    
        class B(object):
            scope = 'b'
            contained = A()
    
        b = B()
    
        print gc.get_referrers(b.contained)[0]['scope']
    

    However, there are two more problems:
    1. Why do you want to do it at the first place? I have a very bad feeling about this, unless you have a very good reason, otherwise, i will never suggest you to do it.
    2. You need to figure out how to pick the right object when it has multiple referrers – get_referrers() return a list of dicts representing all the objects referring the given one.

    You need to describe your question more specifically to get a better answer.

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