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Home/ Questions/Q 1085465
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T22:41:34+00:00 2026-05-16T22:41:34+00:00

Instead of writing code like this every time I define a class: class Foo(object):

  • 0

Instead of writing code like this every time I define a class:

class Foo(object): 
     def __init__(self, a, b, c, d, e, f, g):
        self.a = a
        self.b = b
        self.c = c
        self.d = d
        self.e = e
        self.f = f
        self.g = g

I could use this recipe for automatic attribute assignment.

class Foo(object):
     @autoassign
     def __init__(self, a, b, c, d, e, f, g):
        pass

Two questions:

  1. Are there drawbacks or pitfalls associated with this shortcut?
  2. Is there a better way to achieve similar convenience?
  • 1 1 Answer
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T22:41:35+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 10:41 pm

    There are some things about the autoassign code that bug me (mostly stylistic, but one more serious problem):

    1. autoassign does not assign an
      ‘args’ attribute:

      class Foo(object):
          @autoassign
          def __init__(self,a,b,c=False,*args):
              pass
      a=Foo('IBM','/tmp',True, 100, 101)
      print(a.args)
      # AttributeError: 'Foo' object has no attribute 'args'
      
    2. autoassign acts like a decorator.
      But autoassign(*argnames) calls a
      function which returns a decorator.
      To achieve this magic, autoassign
      needs to test the type of its first
      argument. If given a choice, I
      prefer functions not test
      the type of its arguments.

    3. There seems to be a considerable
      amount of code devoted to setting up
      sieve, lambdas within lambdas,
      ifilters, and lots of conditions.

      if kwargs:
          exclude, f = set(kwargs['exclude']), None
          sieve = lambda l:itertools.ifilter(lambda nv: nv[0] not in exclude, l)
      elif len(names) == 1 and inspect.isfunction(names[0]):
          f = names[0]
          sieve = lambda l:l
      else:
          names, f = set(names), None
          sieve = lambda l: itertools.ifilter(lambda nv: nv[0] in names, l)
      

      I think there might be a simpler way. (See
      below).

    4. for _ in
      itertools.starmap(assigned.setdefault,
      defaults): pass
      . I don’t think
      map or starmap was meant to call
      functions, whose only purpose is their
      side effects. It could have been
      written more clearly with the mundane:

      for key,value in defaults.iteritems():
          assigned.setdefault(key,value)
      

    Here is an alternative simpler implementation which has the same functionality as autoassign (e.g. can do includes and excludes), and which addresses the above points:

    import inspect
    import functools
    
    def autoargs(*include, **kwargs):
        def _autoargs(func):
            attrs, varargs, varkw, defaults = inspect.getargspec(func)
    
            def sieve(attr):
                if kwargs and attr in kwargs['exclude']:
                    return False
                if not include or attr in include:
                    return True
                else:
                    return False
    
            @functools.wraps(func)
            def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
                # handle default values
                if defaults:
                    for attr, val in zip(reversed(attrs), reversed(defaults)):
                        if sieve(attr):
                            setattr(self, attr, val)
                # handle positional arguments
                positional_attrs = attrs[1:]
                for attr, val in zip(positional_attrs, args):
                    if sieve(attr):
                        setattr(self, attr, val)
                # handle varargs
                if varargs:
                    remaining_args = args[len(positional_attrs):]
                    if sieve(varargs):
                        setattr(self, varargs, remaining_args)
                # handle varkw
                if kwargs:
                    for attr, val in kwargs.items():
                        if sieve(attr):
                            setattr(self, attr, val)
                return func(self, *args, **kwargs)
            return wrapper
        return _autoargs
    

    And here is the unit test I used to check its behavior:

    import sys
    import unittest
    import utils_method as um
    
    class Test(unittest.TestCase):
        def test_autoargs(self):
            class A(object):
                @um.autoargs()
                def __init__(self,foo,path,debug=False):
                    pass
            a=A('rhubarb','pie',debug=True)
            self.assertTrue(a.foo=='rhubarb')
            self.assertTrue(a.path=='pie')
            self.assertTrue(a.debug==True)
    
            class B(object):
                @um.autoargs()
                def __init__(self,foo,path,debug=False,*args):
                    pass
            a=B('rhubarb','pie',True, 100, 101)
            self.assertTrue(a.foo=='rhubarb')
            self.assertTrue(a.path=='pie')
            self.assertTrue(a.debug==True)
            self.assertTrue(a.args==(100,101))        
    
            class C(object):
                @um.autoargs()
                def __init__(self,foo,path,debug=False,*args,**kw):
                    pass
            a=C('rhubarb','pie',True, 100, 101,verbose=True)
            self.assertTrue(a.foo=='rhubarb')
            self.assertTrue(a.path=='pie')
            self.assertTrue(a.debug==True)
            self.assertTrue(a.verbose==True)        
            self.assertTrue(a.args==(100,101))        
    
        def test_autoargs_names(self):
            class C(object):
                @um.autoargs('bar','baz','verbose')
                def __init__(self,foo,bar,baz,verbose=False):
                    pass
            a=C('rhubarb','pie',1)
            self.assertTrue(a.bar=='pie')
            self.assertTrue(a.baz==1)
            self.assertTrue(a.verbose==False)
            self.assertRaises(AttributeError,getattr,a,'foo')
    
        def test_autoargs_exclude(self):
            class C(object):
                @um.autoargs(exclude=('bar','baz','verbose'))
                def __init__(self,foo,bar,baz,verbose=False):
                    pass
            a=C('rhubarb','pie',1)
            self.assertTrue(a.foo=='rhubarb')
            self.assertRaises(AttributeError,getattr,a,'bar')
    
        def test_defaults_none(self):
            class A(object):
                @um.autoargs()
                def __init__(self,foo,path,debug):
                    pass
            a=A('rhubarb','pie',debug=True)
            self.assertTrue(a.foo=='rhubarb')
            self.assertTrue(a.path=='pie')
            self.assertTrue(a.debug==True)
    
    
    if __name__ == '__main__':
        unittest.main(argv = sys.argv + ['--verbose'])
    

    PS. Using autoassign or autoargs is compatible with IPython code completion.

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