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Home/ Questions/Q 782947
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T20:28:02+00:00 2026-05-14T20:28:02+00:00

I’m currently using an assert statement with isinstance . Because datetime is a subclass

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I’m currently using an assert statement with isinstance. Because datetime is a subclass of date, I also need to check that it isn’t an instance of datetime. Surely there’s a better way?

from datetime import date, datetime

def some_func(arg):
    assert isinstance(arg, date) and not isinstance(arg, datetime),\
        'arg must be a datetime.date object'
    # ...
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T20:28:03+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:28 pm

    I don’t understand your motivation for rejecting instances of subclasses (given that by definition they support all the behavior the superclass supports!), but if that’s really what you insist on doing, then:

    if type(arg) is not datetime.date:
        raise TypeError('arg must be a datetime.date, not a %s' % type(arg))
    

    Don’t use assert except for sanity check during development (it gets turned to a no-op when you run with python -o), and don’t raise the wrong kind of exception (such as, an AssertionError when a TypeError is clearly what you mean here).

    Using isinstance and then excluding one specific subclass is not a sound way to get a rigidly specified exact type with subclasses excluded: after all, the user might perfectly well subclass datetime.date and add whatever it is you’re so keep to avoid by rejecting instances of datetime.datetime specifically!-)

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