What is the difference between a method decorated with #staticmethod and one decorated with #classmethod?
Maybe a bit of example code will help: Notice the difference in the call signatures of foo, class_foo and static_foo:
class A(object):
def foo(self, x):
print(f"executing foo({self}, {x})")
#classmethod
def class_foo(cls, x):
print(f"executing class_foo({cls}, {x})")
#staticmethod
def static_foo(x):
print(f"executing static_foo({x})")
a = A()
Below is the usual way an object instance calls a method. The object instance, a, is implicitly passed as the first argument.
a.foo(1)
# executing foo(<__main__.A object at 0xb7dbef0c>, 1)
With classmethods, the class of the object instance is implicitly passed as the first argument instead of self.
a.class_foo(1)
# executing class_foo(<class '__main__.A'>, 1)
You can also call class_foo using the class. In fact, if you define something to be
a classmethod, it is probably because you intend to call it from the class rather than from a class instance. A.foo(1) would have raised a TypeError, but A.class_foo(1) works just fine:
A.class_foo(1)
# executing class_foo(<class '__main__.A'>, 1)
One use people have found for class methods is to create inheritable alternative constructors.
With staticmethods, neither self (the object instance) nor cls (the class) is implicitly passed as the first argument. They behave like plain functions except that you can call them from an instance or the class:
a.static_foo(1)
# executing static_foo(1)
A.static_foo('hi')
# executing static_foo(hi)
Staticmethods are used to group functions which have some logical connection with a class to the class.
foo is just a function, but when you call a.foo you don't just get the function,
you get a "partially applied" version of the function with the object instance a bound as the first argument to the function. foo expects 2 arguments, while a.foo only expects 1 argument.
a is bound to foo. That is what is meant by the term "bound" below:
print(a.foo)
# <bound method A.foo of <__main__.A object at 0xb7d52f0c>>
With a.class_foo, a is not bound to class_foo, rather the class A is bound to class_foo.
print(a.class_foo)
# <bound method type.class_foo of <class '__main__.A'>>
Here, with a staticmethod, even though it is a method, a.static_foo just returns
a good 'ole function with no arguments bound. static_foo expects 1 argument, and
a.static_foo expects 1 argument too.
print(a.static_foo)
# <function static_foo at 0xb7d479cc>
And of course the same thing happens when you call static_foo with the class A instead.
print(A.static_foo)
# <function static_foo at 0xb7d479cc>
A staticmethod is a method that knows nothing about the class or instance it was called on. It just gets the arguments that were passed, no implicit first argument. It is basically useless in Python -- you can just use a module function instead of a staticmethod.
A classmethod, on the other hand, is a method that gets passed the class it was called on, or the class of the instance it was called on, as first argument. This is useful when you want the method to be a factory for the class: since it gets the actual class it was called on as first argument, you can always instantiate the right class, even when subclasses are involved. Observe for instance how dict.fromkeys(), a classmethod, returns an instance of the subclass when called on a subclass:
>>> class DictSubclass(dict):
... def __repr__(self):
... return "DictSubclass"
...
>>> dict.fromkeys("abc")
{'a': None, 'c': None, 'b': None}
>>> DictSubclass.fromkeys("abc")
DictSubclass
>>>
Basically #classmethod makes a method whose first argument is the class it's called from (rather than the class instance), #staticmethod does not have any implicit arguments.
To decide whether to use #staticmethod or #classmethod you have to look inside your method. If your method accesses other variables/methods in your class then use #classmethod. On the other hand, if your method does not touches any other parts of the class then use #staticmethod.
class Apple:
_counter = 0
#staticmethod
def about_apple():
print('Apple is good for you.')
# note you can still access other member of the class
# but you have to use the class instance
# which is not very nice, because you have repeat yourself
#
# For example:
# #staticmethod
# print('Number of apples have been juiced: %s' % Apple._counter)
#
# #classmethod
# print('Number of apples have been juiced: %s' % cls._counter)
#
# #classmethod is especially useful when you move your function to another class,
# you don't have to rename the referenced class
#classmethod
def make_apple_juice(cls, number_of_apples):
print('Making juice:')
for i in range(number_of_apples):
cls._juice_this(i)
#classmethod
def _juice_this(cls, apple):
print('Juicing apple %d...' % apple)
cls._counter += 1
Official python docs:
#classmethod
A class method receives the class as
implicit first argument, just like an
instance method receives the instance.
To declare a class method, use this
idiom:
class C:
#classmethod
def f(cls, arg1, arg2, ...): ...
The #classmethod form is a function
decorator – see the description of
function definitions in Function
definitions for details.
It can be called either on the class
(such as C.f()) or on an instance
(such as C().f()). The instance is
ignored except for its class. If a
class method is called for a derived
class, the derived class object is
passed as the implied first argument.
Class methods are different than C++
or Java static methods. If you want
those, see staticmethod() in this
section.
#staticmethod
A static method does not receive an
implicit first argument. To declare a
static method, use this idiom:
class C:
#staticmethod
def f(arg1, arg2, ...): ...
The #staticmethod form is a function
decorator – see the description of
function definitions in Function
definitions for details.
It can be called either on the class
(such as C.f()) or on an instance
(such as C().f()). The instance is
ignored except for its class.
Static methods in Python are similar
to those found in Java or C++. For a
more advanced concept, see
classmethod() in this section.
Here is a short article on this question
#staticmethod function is nothing more than a function defined inside a class. It is callable without instantiating the class first. It’s definition is immutable via inheritance.
#classmethod function also callable without instantiating the class, but its definition follows Sub class, not Parent class, via inheritance. That’s because the first argument for #classmethod function must always be cls (class).
What is the difference between #staticmethod and #classmethod in Python?
You may have seen Python code like this pseudocode, which demonstrates the signatures of the various method types and provides a docstring to explain each:
class Foo(object):
def a_normal_instance_method(self, arg_1, kwarg_2=None):
'''
Return a value that is a function of the instance with its
attributes, and other arguments such as arg_1 and kwarg2
'''
#staticmethod
def a_static_method(arg_0):
'''
Return a value that is a function of arg_0. It does not know the
instance or class it is called from.
'''
#classmethod
def a_class_method(cls, arg1):
'''
Return a value that is a function of the class and other arguments.
respects subclassing, it is called with the class it is called from.
'''
The Normal Instance Method
First I'll explain a_normal_instance_method. This is precisely called an "instance method". When an instance method is used, it is used as a partial function (as opposed to a total function, defined for all values when viewed in source code) that is, when used, the first of the arguments is predefined as the instance of the object, with all of its given attributes. It has the instance of the object bound to it, and it must be called from an instance of the object. Typically, it will access various attributes of the instance.
For example, this is an instance of a string:
', '
if we use the instance method, join on this string, to join another iterable,
it quite obviously is a function of the instance, in addition to being a function of the iterable list, ['a', 'b', 'c']:
>>> ', '.join(['a', 'b', 'c'])
'a, b, c'
Bound methods
Instance methods can be bound via a dotted lookup for use later.
For example, this binds the str.join method to the ':' instance:
>>> join_with_colons = ':'.join
And later we can use this as a function that already has the first argument bound to it. In this way, it works like a partial function on the instance:
>>> join_with_colons('abcde')
'a:b:c:d:e'
>>> join_with_colons(['FF', 'FF', 'FF', 'FF', 'FF', 'FF'])
'FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF'
Static Method
The static method does not take the instance as an argument.
It is very similar to a module level function.
However, a module level function must live in the module and be specially imported to other places where it is used.
If it is attached to the object, however, it will follow the object conveniently through importing and inheritance as well.
An example of a static method is str.maketrans, moved from the string module in Python 3. It makes a translation table suitable for consumption by str.translate. It does seem rather silly when used from an instance of a string, as demonstrated below, but importing the function from the string module is rather clumsy, and it's nice to be able to call it from the class, as in str.maketrans
# demonstrate same function whether called from instance or not:
>>> ', '.maketrans('ABC', 'abc')
{65: 97, 66: 98, 67: 99}
>>> str.maketrans('ABC', 'abc')
{65: 97, 66: 98, 67: 99}
In python 2, you have to import this function from the increasingly less useful string module:
>>> import string
>>> 'ABCDEFG'.translate(string.maketrans('ABC', 'abc'))
'abcDEFG'
Class Method
A class method is a similar to an instance method in that it takes an implicit first argument, but instead of taking the instance, it takes the class. Frequently these are used as alternative constructors for better semantic usage and it will support inheritance.
The most canonical example of a builtin classmethod is dict.fromkeys. It is used as an alternative constructor of dict, (well suited for when you know what your keys are and want a default value for them.)
>>> dict.fromkeys(['a', 'b', 'c'])
{'c': None, 'b': None, 'a': None}
When we subclass dict, we can use the same constructor, which creates an instance of the subclass.
>>> class MyDict(dict): 'A dict subclass, use to demo classmethods'
>>> md = MyDict.fromkeys(['a', 'b', 'c'])
>>> md
{'a': None, 'c': None, 'b': None}
>>> type(md)
<class '__main__.MyDict'>
See the pandas source code for other similar examples of alternative constructors, and see also the official Python documentation on classmethod and staticmethod.
I started learning programming language with C++ and then Java and then Python and so this question bothered me a lot as well, until I understood the simple usage of each.
Class Method: Python unlike Java and C++ doesn't have constructor overloading. And so to achieve this you could use classmethod. Following example will explain this
Let's consider we have a Person class which takes two arguments first_name and last_name and creates the instance of Person.
class Person(object):
def __init__(self, first_name, last_name):
self.first_name = first_name
self.last_name = last_name
Now, if the requirement comes where you need to create a class using a single name only, just a first_name, you can't do something like this in Python.
This will give you an error when you will try to create an object (instance).
class Person(object):
def __init__(self, first_name, last_name):
self.first_name = first_name
self.last_name = last_name
def __init__(self, first_name):
self.first_name = first_name
However, you could achieve the same thing using #classmethod as mentioned below
class Person(object):
def __init__(self, first_name, last_name):
self.first_name = first_name
self.last_name = last_name
#classmethod
def get_person(cls, first_name):
return cls(first_name, "")
Static Method: This is rather simple, it's not bound to instance or class and you can simply call that using class name.
So let's say in above example you need a validation that first_name should not exceed 20 characters, you can simply do this.
#staticmethod
def validate_name(name):
return len(name) <= 20
and you could simply call using class name
Person.validate_name("Gaurang Shah")
Only the first argument differs:
normal method: the current object is automatically passed as an (additional) first argument
classmethod: the class of the current object is automatically passed as an (additional) fist argument
staticmethod: no extra arguments are automatically passed. What you passed to the function is what you get.
In more detail...
normal method
The "standard" method, as in every object oriented language. When an object's method is called, it is automatically given an extra argument self as its first argument. That is, method
def f(self, x, y)
must be called with 2 arguments. self is automatically passed, and it is the object itself. Similar to the this that magically appears in eg. java/c++, only in python it is shown explicitly.
actually, the first argument does not have to be called self, but it's the standard convention, so keep it
class method
When the method is decorated
#classmethod
def f(cls, x, y)
the automatically provided argument is not self, but the class of self.
static method
When the method is decorated
#staticmethod
def f(x, y)
the method is not given any automatic argument at all. It is only given the parameters that it is called with.
usages
classmethod is mostly used for alternative constructors.
staticmethod does not use the state of the object, or even the structure of the class itself. It could be a function external to a class. It only put inside the class for grouping functions with similar functionality (for example, like Java's Math class static methods)
class Point
def __init__(self, x, y):
self.x = x
self.y = y
#classmethod
def frompolar(cls, radius, angle):
"""The `cls` argument is the `Point` class itself"""
return cls(radius * cos(angle), radius * sin(angle))
#staticmethod
def angle(x, y):
"""this could be outside the class, but we put it here
just because we think it is logically related to the class."""
return atan(y, x)
p1 = Point(3, 2)
p2 = Point.frompolar(3, pi/4)
angle = Point.angle(3, 2)
I think a better question is "When would you use #classmethod vs #staticmethod?"
#classmethod allows you easy access to private members that are associated to the class definition. this is a great way to do singletons, or factory classes that control the number of instances of the created objects exist.
#staticmethod provides marginal performance gains, but I have yet to see a productive use of a static method within a class that couldn't be achieved as a standalone function outside the class.
Static Methods:
Simple functions with no self argument.
Work on class attributes; not on instance attributes.
Can be called through both class and instance.
The built-in function staticmethod()is used to create them.
Benefits of Static Methods:
It localizes the function name in the classscope
It moves the function code closer to where it is used
More convenient to import versus module-level functions since each method does not have to be specially imported
#staticmethod
def some_static_method(*args, **kwds):
pass
Class Methods:
Functions that have first argument as classname.
Can be called through both class and instance.
These are created with classmethod in-built function.
#classmethod
def some_class_method(cls, *args, **kwds):
pass
#decorators were added in python 2.4 If you're using python < 2.4 you can use the classmethod() and staticmethod() function.
For example, if you want to create a factory method (A function returning an instance of a different implementation of a class depending on what argument it gets) you can do something like:
class Cluster(object):
def _is_cluster_for(cls, name):
"""
see if this class is the cluster with this name
this is a classmethod
"""
return cls.__name__ == name
_is_cluster_for = classmethod(_is_cluster_for)
#static method
def getCluster(name):
"""
static factory method, should be in Cluster class
returns a cluster object for the given name
"""
for cls in Cluster.__subclasses__():
if cls._is_cluster_for(name):
return cls()
getCluster = staticmethod(getCluster)
Also observe that this is a good example for using a classmethod and a static method,
The static method clearly belongs to the class, since it uses the class Cluster internally.
The classmethod only needs information about the class, and no instance of the object.
Another benefit of making the _is_cluster_for method a classmethod is so a subclass can decide to change it's implementation, maybe because it is pretty generic and can handle more than one type of cluster, so just checking the name of the class would not be enough.
Let me tell the similarity between a method decorated with #classmethod vs #staticmethod first.
Similarity: Both of them can be called on the Class itself, rather than just the instance of the class. So, both of them in a sense are Class's methods.
Difference: A classmethod will receive the class itself as the first argument, while a staticmethod does not.
So a static method is, in a sense, not bound to the Class itself and is just hanging in there just because it may have a related functionality.
>>> class Klaus:
#classmethod
def classmthd(*args):
return args
#staticmethod
def staticmthd(*args):
return args
# 1. Call classmethod without any arg
>>> Klaus.classmthd()
(__main__.Klaus,) # the class gets passed as the first argument
# 2. Call classmethod with 1 arg
>>> Klaus.classmthd('chumma')
(__main__.Klaus, 'chumma')
# 3. Call staticmethod without any arg
>>> Klaus.staticmthd()
()
# 4. Call staticmethod with 1 arg
>>> Klaus.staticmthd('chumma')
('chumma',)
#staticmethod just disables the default function as method descriptor. classmethod wraps your function in a container callable that passes a reference to the owning class as first argument:
>>> class C(object):
... pass
...
>>> def f():
... pass
...
>>> staticmethod(f).__get__(None, C)
<function f at 0x5c1cf0>
>>> classmethod(f).__get__(None, C)
<bound method type.f of <class '__main__.C'>>
As a matter of fact, classmethod has a runtime overhead but makes it possible to access the owning class. Alternatively I recommend using a metaclass and putting the class methods on that metaclass:
>>> class CMeta(type):
... def foo(cls):
... print cls
...
>>> class C(object):
... __metaclass__ = CMeta
...
>>> C.foo()
<class '__main__.C'>
Another consideration with respect to staticmethod vs classmethod comes up with inheritance. Say you have the following class:
class Foo(object):
#staticmethod
def bar():
return "In Foo"
And you then want to override bar() in a child class:
class Foo2(Foo):
#staticmethod
def bar():
return "In Foo2"
This works, but note that now the bar() implementation in the child class (Foo2) can no longer take advantage of anything specific to that class. For example, say Foo2 had a method called magic() that you want to use in the Foo2 implementation of bar():
class Foo2(Foo):
#staticmethod
def bar():
return "In Foo2"
#staticmethod
def magic():
return "Something useful you'd like to use in bar, but now can't"
The workaround here would be to call Foo2.magic() in bar(), but then you're repeating yourself (if the name of Foo2 changes, you'll have to remember to update that bar() method).
To me, this is a slight violation of the open/closed principle, since a decision made in Foo is impacting your ability to refactor common code in a derived class (ie it's less open to extension). If bar() were a classmethod we'd be fine:
class Foo(object):
#classmethod
def bar(cls):
return "In Foo"
class Foo2(Foo):
#classmethod
def bar(cls):
return "In Foo2 " + cls.magic()
#classmethod
def magic(cls):
return "MAGIC"
print Foo2().bar()
Gives: In Foo2 MAGIC
Also: historical note: Guido Van Rossum (Python's creator) once referred to staticmethod's as "an accident": https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2012-May/014969.html
we all know how limited static methods are. (They're basically an accident -- back in the Python 2.2 days when I was inventing new-style classes and descriptors, I meant to implement class methods but at first I didn't understand them and accidentally implemented static methods first. Then it was too late to remove them and only provide class methods.
Also: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2016-July/041189.html
Honestly, staticmethod was something of a mistake -- I was trying to do something like Java class methods but once it was released I found what was really needed was classmethod. But it was too late to get rid of staticmethod.
The definitive guide on how to use static, class or abstract methods in Python is one good link for this topic, and summary it as following.
#staticmethod function is nothing more than a function defined inside a class. It is callable without instantiating the class first. It’s definition is immutable via inheritance.
Python does not have to instantiate a bound-method for object.
It eases the readability of the code, and it does not depend on the state of object itself;
#classmethod function also callable without instantiating the class, but its definition follows Sub class, not Parent class, via inheritance, can be overridden by subclass. That’s because the first argument for #classmethod function must always be cls (class).
Factory methods, that are used to create an instance for a class using for example some sort of pre-processing.
Static methods calling static methods: if you split a static methods in several static methods, you shouldn't hard-code the class name but use class methods
I will try to explain the basic difference using an example.
class A(object):
x = 0
def say_hi(self):
pass
#staticmethod
def say_hi_static():
pass
#classmethod
def say_hi_class(cls):
pass
def run_self(self):
self.x += 1
print self.x # outputs 1
self.say_hi()
self.say_hi_static()
self.say_hi_class()
#staticmethod
def run_static():
print A.x # outputs 0
# A.say_hi() # wrong
A.say_hi_static()
A.say_hi_class()
#classmethod
def run_class(cls):
print cls.x # outputs 0
# cls.say_hi() # wrong
cls.say_hi_static()
cls.say_hi_class()
1 - we can directly call static and classmethods without initializing
# A.run_self() # wrong
A.run_static()
A.run_class()
2- Static method cannot call self method but can call other static and classmethod
3- Static method belong to class and will not use object at all.
4- Class method are not bound to an object but to a class.
The difference occurs when there is inheritance.
Suppose that there are two classes-- Parent and Child. If one wants to use #staticmethod, print_name method should be written twice because the name of the class should be written in the print line.
class Parent:
_class_name = "Parent"
#staticmethod
def print_name():
print(Parent._class_name)
class Child(Parent):
_class_name = "Child"
#staticmethod
def print_name():
print(Child._class_name)
Parent.print_name()
Child.print_name()
However, for #classmethod, it is not required to write print_name method twice.
class Parent:
_class_name = "Parent"
#classmethod
def print_name(cls):
print(cls._class_name)
class Child(Parent):
_class_name = "Child"
Parent.print_name()
Child.print_name()
Python comes with several built-in decorators. The big three are:
#classmethod
#staticmethod
#property
First let's note that any function of a class can be called with instance of this class (after we initialized this class).
#classmethod is the way to call function not only as an instance of a class but also directly by the class itself as its first argument.
#staticmethod is a way of putting a function into a class (because it logically belongs there), while indicating that it does not require access to the class (so we don't need to use self in function definition).
Let's consider the following class:
class DecoratorTest(object):
def __init__(self):
pass
def doubler(self, x):
return x*2
#classmethod
def class_doubler(cls, x): # we need to use 'cls' instead of 'self'; 'cls' reference to the class instead of an instance of the class
return x*2
#staticmethod
def static_doubler(x): # no need adding 'self' here; static_doubler() could be just a function not inside the class
return x*2
Let's see how it works:
decor = DecoratorTest()
print(decor.doubler(5))
# 10
print(decor.class_doubler(5)) # a call with an instance of a class
# 10
print(DecoratorTest.class_doubler(5)) # a direct call by the class itself
# 10
# staticmethod could be called in the same way as classmethod.
print(decor.static_doubler(5)) # as an instance of the class
# 10
print(DecoratorTest.static_doubler(5)) # or as a direct call
# 10
Here you can see some use cases for those methods.
Bonus: you can read about #property decorator here
Instance Method:
+ Can modify object instance state
+ Can modify class state
Class Method:
- Can't modify object instance state
+ Can modify class state
Static Method:
- Can't modify object instance state
- Can't modify class state
class MyClass:
'''
Instance method has a mandatory first attribute self which represent the instance itself.
Instance method must be called by a instantiated instance.
'''
def method(self):
return 'instance method called', self
'''
Class method has a mandatory first attribute cls which represent the class itself.
Class method can be called by an instance or by the class directly.
Its most common using scenario is to define a factory method.
'''
#classmethod
def class_method(cls):
return 'class method called', cls
'''
Static method doesn’t have any attributes of instances or the class.
It also can be called by an instance or by the class directly.
Its most common using scenario is to define some helper or utility functions which are closely relative to the class.
'''
#staticmethod
def static_method():
return 'static method called'
obj = MyClass()
print(obj.method())
print(obj.class_method()) # MyClass.class_method()
print(obj.static_method()) # MyClass.static_method()
output:
('instance method called', <__main__.MyClass object at 0x100fb3940>)
('class method called', <class '__main__.MyClass'>)
static method called
The instance method we actually had access to the object instance , right so this was an instance off a my class object whereas with the class method we have access to the class itself. But not to any of the objects, because the class method doesn't really care about an object existing. However you can both call a class method and static method on an object instance. This is going to work it doesn't really make a difference, so again when you call static method here it's going to work and it's going to know which method you want to call.
The Static methods are used to do some utility tasks, and class methods are used for factory methods. The factory methods can return class objects for different use cases.
And finally, a short example for better understanding:
class Student:
def __init__(self, first_name, last_name):
self.first_name = first_name
self.last_name = last_name
#classmethod
def get_from_string(cls, name_string: str):
first_name, last_name = name_string.split()
if Student.validate_name(first_name) and Student.validate_name(last_name):
return cls(first_name, last_name)
else:
print('Invalid Names')
#staticmethod
def validate_name(name):
return len(name) <= 10
stackoverflow_student = Student.get_from_string('Name Surname')
print(stackoverflow_student.first_name) # Name
print(stackoverflow_student.last_name) # Surname
#classmethod : can be used to create a shared global access to all the instances created of that class..... like updating a record by multiple users....
I particulary found it use ful when creating singletons as well..:)
#static method: has nothing to do with the class or instance being associated with ...but for readability can use static method
My contribution demonstrates the difference amongst #classmethod, #staticmethod, and instance methods, including how an instance can indirectly call a #staticmethod. But instead of indirectly calling a #staticmethod from an instance, making it private may be more "pythonic." Getting something from a private method isn't demonstrated here but it's basically the same concept.
#!python3
from os import system
system('cls')
# % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % %
class DemoClass(object):
# instance methods need a class instance and
# can access the instance through 'self'
def instance_method_1(self):
return 'called from inside the instance_method_1()'
def instance_method_2(self):
# an instance outside the class indirectly calls the static_method
return self.static_method() + ' via instance_method_2()'
# class methods don't need a class instance, they can't access the
# instance (self) but they have access to the class itself via 'cls'
#classmethod
def class_method(cls):
return 'called from inside the class_method()'
# static methods don't have access to 'cls' or 'self', they work like
# regular functions but belong to the class' namespace
#staticmethod
def static_method():
return 'called from inside the static_method()'
# % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % %
# works even if the class hasn't been instantiated
print(DemoClass.class_method() + '\n')
''' called from inside the class_method() '''
# works even if the class hasn't been instantiated
print(DemoClass.static_method() + '\n')
''' called from inside the static_method() '''
# % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % %
# >>>>> all methods types can be called on a class instance <<<<<
# instantiate the class
democlassObj = DemoClass()
# call instance_method_1()
print(democlassObj.instance_method_1() + '\n')
''' called from inside the instance_method_1() '''
# # indirectly call static_method through instance_method_2(), there's really no use
# for this since a #staticmethod can be called whether the class has been
# instantiated or not
print(democlassObj.instance_method_2() + '\n')
''' called from inside the static_method() via instance_method_2() '''
# call class_method()
print(democlassObj.class_method() + '\n')
''' called from inside the class_method() '''
# call static_method()
print(democlassObj.static_method())
''' called from inside the static_method() '''
"""
# whether the class is instantiated or not, this doesn't work
print(DemoClass.instance_method_1() + '\n')
'''
TypeError: TypeError: unbound method instancemethod() must be called with
DemoClass instance as first argument (got nothing instead)
'''
"""
A class method receives the class as implicit first argument, just like an instance method receives the instance. It is a method which is bound to the class and not the object of the class.It has access to the state of the class as it takes a class parameter that points to the class and not the object instance. It can modify a class state that would apply across all the instances of the class. For example it can modify a class variable that will be applicable to all the instances.
On the other hand, a static method does not receive an implicit first argument, compared to class methods or instance methods. And can’t access or modify class state. It only belongs to the class because from design point of view that is the correct way. But in terms of functionality is not bound, at runtime, to the class.
as a guideline, use static methods as utilities, use class methods for example as factory . Or maybe to define a singleton. And use instance methods to model the state and behavior of instances.
Hope I was clear !
You might want to consider the difference between:
class A:
def foo(): # no self parameter, no decorator
pass
and
class B:
#staticmethod
def foo(): # no self parameter
pass
This has changed between python2 and python3:
python2:
>>> A.foo()
TypeError
>>> A().foo()
TypeError
>>> B.foo()
>>> B().foo()
python3:
>>> A.foo()
>>> A().foo()
TypeError
>>> B.foo()
>>> B().foo()
So using #staticmethod for methods only called directly from the class has become optional in python3. If you want to call them from both class and instance, you still need to use the #staticmethod decorator.
The other cases have been well covered by unutbus answer.
Class methods, as the name suggests, are used to make changes to classes and not the objects. To make changes to classes, they will modify the class attributes(not object attributes), since that is how you update classes.
This is the reason that class methods take the class(conventionally denoted by 'cls') as the first argument.
class A(object):
m=54
#classmethod
def class_method(cls):
print "m is %d" % cls.m
Static methods on the other hand, are used to perform functionalities that are not bound to the class i.e. they will not read or write class variables. Hence, static methods do not take classes as arguments. They are used so that classes can perform functionalities that are not directly related to the purpose of the class.
class X(object):
m=54 #will not be referenced
#staticmethod
def static_method():
print "Referencing/calling a variable or function outside this class. E.g. Some global variable/function."
I think giving a purely Python version of staticmethod and classmethod would help to understand the difference between them at language level (Refers to Descriptor Howto Guide).
Both of them are non-data descriptors (It would be easier to understand them if you are familiar with descriptors first).
class StaticMethod(object):
"Emulate PyStaticMethod_Type() in Objects/funcobject.c"
def __init__(self, f):
self.f = f
def __get__(self, obj, objtype=None):
return self.f
class ClassMethod(object):
"Emulate PyClassMethod_Type() in Objects/funcobject.c"
def __init__(self, f):
self.f = f
def __get__(self, obj, cls=None):
def inner(*args, **kwargs):
if cls is None:
cls = type(obj)
return self.f(cls, *args, **kwargs)
return inner
Analyze #staticmethod literally providing different insights.
A normal method of a class is an implicit dynamic method which takes the instance as first argument.
In contrast, a staticmethod does not take the instance as first argument, so is called 'static'.
A staticmethod is indeed such a normal function the same as those outside a class definition.
It is luckily grouped into the class just in order to stand closer where it is applied, or you might scroll around to find it.
One pretty important practical difference occurs when subclassing. If you don't mind, I'll hijack #unutbu's example:
class A:
def foo(self, x):
print("executing foo(%s, %s)" % (self, x))
#classmethod
def class_foo(cls, x):
print("executing class_foo(%s, %s)" % (cls, x))
#staticmethod
def static_foo(x):
print("executing static_foo(%s)" % x)
class B(A):
pass
In class_foo, the method knows which class it is called on:
A.class_foo(1)
# => executing class_foo(<class '__main__.A'>, 1)
B.class_foo(1)
# => executing class_foo(<class '__main__.B'>, 1)
In static_foo, there is no way to determine whether it is called on A or B:
A.static_foo(1)
# => executing static_foo(1)
B.static_foo(1)
# => executing static_foo(1)
Note that this doesn't mean you can't use other methods in a staticmethod, you just have to reference the class directly, which means subclasses' staticmethods will still reference the parent class:
class A:
#classmethod
def class_qux(cls, x):
print(f"executing class_qux({cls}, {x})")
#classmethod
def class_bar(cls, x):
cls.class_qux(x)
#staticmethod
def static_bar(x):
A.class_qux(x)
class B(A):
pass
A.class_bar(1)
# => executing class_qux(<class '__main__.A'>, 1)
B.class_bar(1)
# => executing class_qux(<class '__main__.B'>, 1)
A.static_bar(1)
# => executing class_qux(<class '__main__.A'>, 1)
B.static_bar(1)
# => executing class_qux(<class '__main__.A'>, 1)
tldr;
A staticmethod is essentially a function bound to a class (and consequently its instances)
A classmethod is essentially an inheritable staticmethod.
For details, see the excellent answers by others.
First let's start with an example code that we'll use to understand both concepts:
class Employee:
NO_OF_EMPLOYEES = 0
def __init__(self, first_name, last_name, salary):
self.first_name = first_name
self.last_name = last_name
self.salary = salary
self.increment_employees()
def give_raise(self, amount):
self.salary += amount
#classmethod
def employee_from_full_name(cls, full_name, salary):
split_name = full_name.split(' ')
first_name = split_name[0]
last_name = split_name[1]
return cls(first_name, last_name, salary)
#classmethod
def increment_employees(cls):
cls.NO_OF_EMPLOYEES += 1
#staticmethod
def get_employee_legal_obligations_txt():
legal_obligations = """
1. An employee must complete 8 hours per working day
2. ...
"""
return legal_obligations
Class method
A class method accepts the class itself as an implicit argument and -optionally- any other arguments specified in the definition. It’s important to understand that a class method, does not have access to object instances (like instance methods do). Therefore, class methods cannot be used to alter the state of an instantiated object but instead, they are capable of changing the class state which is shared amongst all the instances of that class.
Class methods are typically useful when we need to access the class itself — for example, when we want to create a factory method, that is a method that creates instances of the class. In other words, class methods can serve as alternative constructors.
In our example code, an instance of Employee can be constructed by providing three arguments; first_name , last_name and salary.
employee_1 = Employee('Andrew', 'Brown', 85000)
print(employee_1.first_name)
print(employee_1.salary)
'Andrew'
85000
Now let’s assume that there’s a chance that the name of an Employee can be provided in a single field in which the first and last names are separated by a whitespace. In this case, we could possibly use our class method called employee_from_full_name that accepts three arguments in total. The first one, is the class itself, which is an implicit argument which means that it won’t be provided when calling the method — Python will automatically do this for us:
employee_2 = Employee.employee_from_full_name('John Black', 95000)
print(employee_2.first_name)
print(employee_2.salary)
'John'
95000
Note that it is also possible to call employee_from_full_name from object instances although in this context it doesn’t make a lot of sense:
employee_1 = Employee('Andrew', 'Brown', 85000)
employee_2 = employee_1.employee_from_full_name('John Black', 95000)
Another reason why we might want to create a class method, is when we need to change the state of the class. In our example, the class variable NO_OF_EMPLOYEES keeps track of the number of employees currently working for the company. This method is called every time a new instance of Employee is created and it updates the count accordingly:
employee_1 = Employee('Andrew', 'Brown', 85000)
print(f'Number of employees: {Employee.NO_OF_EMPLOYEES}')
employee_2 = Employee.employee_from_full_name('John Black', 95000)
print(f'Number of employees: {Employee.NO_OF_EMPLOYEES}')
Number of employees: 1
Number of employees: 2
Static methods
On the other hand, in static methods neither the instance (i.e. self) nor the class itself (i.e. cls) is passed as an implicit argument. This means that such methods, are not capable of accessing the class itself or its instances.
Now one could argue that static methods are not useful in the context of classes as they can also be placed in helper modules instead of adding them as members of the class. In object oriented programming, it is important to structure your classes into logical chunks and thus, static methods are quite useful when we need to add a method under a class simply because it logically belongs to the class.
In our example, the static method named get_employee_legal_obligations_txt simply returns a string that contains the legal obligations of every single employee of a company. This function, does not interact with the class itself nor with any instance. It could have been placed into a different helper module however, it is only relevant to this class and therefore we have to place it under the Employee class.
A static method can be access directly from the class itself
print(Employee.get_employee_legal_obligations_txt())
1. An employee must complete 8 hours per working day
2. ...
or from an instance of the class:
employee_1 = Employee('Andrew', 'Brown', 85000)
print(employee_1.get_employee_legal_obligations_txt())
1. An employee must complete 8 hours per working day
2. ...
References
What's the difference between static and class methods in Python?
In Python, I can create a class method using the #classmethod decorator:
>>> class C:
... #classmethod
... def f(cls):
... print(f'f called with cls={cls}')
...
>>> C.f()
f called with cls=<class '__main__.C'>
Alternatively, I can use a normal (instance) method on a metaclass:
>>> class M(type):
... def f(cls):
... print(f'f called with cls={cls}')
...
>>> class C(metaclass=M):
... pass
...
>>> C.f()
f called with cls=<class '__main__.C'>
As shown by the output of C.f(), these two approaches provide similar functionality.
What are the differences between using #classmethod and using a normal method on a metaclass?
As classes are instances of a metaclass, it is not unexpected that an "instance method" on the metaclass will behave like a classmethod.
However, yes, there are differences - and some of them are more than semantic:
The most important difference is that a method in the metaclass is not "visible" from a class instance. That happens because the attribute lookup in Python (in a simplified way - descriptors may take precedence) search for an attribute in the instance - if it is not present in the instance, Python then looks in that instance's class, and then the search continues on the superclasses of the class, but not on the classes of the class. The Python stdlib make use of this feature in the abc.ABCMeta.register method.
That feature can be used for good, as methods related with the class themselves are free to be re-used as instance attributes without any conflict (but a method would still conflict).
Another difference, though obvious, is that a method declared in the metaclass can be available in several classes, not otherwise related - if you have different class hierarchies, not related at all in what they deal with, but want some common functionality for all classes, you'd have to come up with a mixin class, that would have to be included as base in both hierarchies (say for including all classes in an application registry). (NB. the mixin may sometimes be a better call than a metaclass)
A classmethod is a specialized "classmethod" object, while a method in the metaclass is an ordinary function.
So, it happens that the mechanism that classmethods use is the "descriptor protocol". While normal functions feature a __get__ method that will insert the self argument when they are retrieved from an instance, and leave that argument empty when retrieved from a class, a classmethod object have a different __get__, that will insert the class itself (the "owner") as the first parameter in both situations.
This makes no practical differences most of the time, but if you want access to the method as a function, for purposes of adding dynamically adding decorator to it, or any other, for a method in the metaclass meta.method retrieves the function, ready to be used, while you have to use cls.my_classmethod.__func__ to retrieve it from a classmethod (and then you have to create another classmethod object and assign it back, if you do some wrapping).
Basically, these are the 2 examples:
class M1(type):
def clsmethod1(cls):
pass
class CLS1(metaclass=M1):
pass
def runtime_wrap(cls, method_name, wrapper):
mcls = type(cls)
setattr(mcls, method_name, wrapper(getatttr(mcls, method_name)))
def wrapper(classmethod):
def new_method(cls):
print("wrapper called")
return classmethod(cls)
return new_method
runtime_wrap(cls1, "clsmethod1", wrapper)
class CLS2:
#classmethod
def classmethod2(cls):
pass
def runtime_wrap2(cls, method_name, wrapper):
setattr(cls, method_name, classmethod(
wrapper(getatttr(cls, method_name).__func__)
)
)
runtime_wrap2(cls1, "clsmethod1", wrapper)
In other words: apart from the important difference that a method defined in the metaclass is visible from the instance and a classmethod object do not, the other differences, at runtime will seem obscure and meaningless - but that happens because the language does not need to go out of its way with special rules for classmethods: Both ways of declaring a classmethod are possible, as a consequence from the language design - one, for the fact that a class is itself an object, and another, as a possibility among many, of the use of the descriptor protocol which allows one to specialize attribute access in an instance and in a class:
The classmethod builtin is defined in native code, but it could just be coded in pure python and would work in the exact same way. The 5 line class bellow can be used as a classmethod decorator with no runtime differences to the built-in #classmethod" at all (though distinguishable through introspection such as calls toisinstance, and evenrepr` of course):
class myclassmethod:
def __init__(self, func):
self.__func__ = func
def __get__(self, instance, owner):
return lambda *args, **kw: self.__func__(owner, *args, **kw)
And, beyond methods, it is interesting to keep in mind that specialized attributes such as a #property on the metaclass will work as specialized class attributes, just the same, with no surprising behavior at all.
When you phrase it like you did in the question, the #classmethod and metaclasses may look similar but they have rather different purposes. The class that is injected in the #classmethod's argument is usually used for constructing an instance (i.e. an alternative constructor). On the other hand, the metaclasses are usually used to modify the class itself (e.g. like what Django does with its models DSL).
That is not to say that you can't modify the class inside a classmethod. But then the question becomes why didn't you define the class in the way you want to modify it in the first place? If not, it might suggest a refactor to use multiple classes.
Let's expand the first example a bit.
class C:
#classmethod
def f(cls):
print(f'f called with cls={cls}')
Borrowing from the Python docs, the above will expand to something like the following:
class ClassMethod(object):
"Emulate PyClassMethod_Type() in Objects/funcobject.c"
def __init__(self, f):
self.f = f
def __get__(self, obj, klass=None):
if klass is None:
klass = type(obj)
def newfunc(*args):
return self.f(klass, *args)
return newfunc
class C:
def f(cls):
print(f'f called with cls={cls}')
f = ClassMethod(f)
Note how __get__ can take either an instance or the class (or both), and thus you can do both C.f and C().f. This is unlike the metaclass example you give which will throw an AttributeError for C().f.
Moreover, in the metaclass example, f does not exist in C.__dict__. When looking up the attribute f with C.f, the interpreter looks at C.__dict__ and then after failing to find, looks at type(C).__dict__ (which is M.__dict__). This may matter if you want the flexibility to override f in C, although I doubt this will ever be of practical use.
In your example, the difference would be in some other classes that will have M set as their metaclass.
class M(type):
def f(cls):
pass
class C(metaclass=M):
pass
class C2(metaclass=M):
pass
C.f()
C2.f()
class M(type):
pass
class C(metaclass=M):
#classmethod
def f(cls):
pass
class C2(metaclass=M):
pass
C.f()
# C2 does not have 'f'
Here is more on metaclasses
What are some (concrete) use-cases for metaclasses?
Both #classmethod and Metaclass are different.
Everything in python is an object. Every thing means every thing.
What is Metaclass ?
As said every thing is an object. Classes are also objects in fact classes are instances of other mysterious objects formally called as meta-classes. Default metaclass in python is "type" if not specified
By default all classes defined are instances of type.
Classes are instances of Meta-Classes
Few important points are to understand metioned behaviour
As classes are instances of meta classes.
Like every instantiated object, like objects(instances) get their attributes from class. Class will get it's attributes from Meta-Class
Consider Following Code
class Meta(type):
def foo(self):
print(f'foo is called self={self}')
print('{} is instance of {}: {}'.format(self, Meta, isinstance(self, Meta)))
class C(metaclass=Meta):
pass
C.foo()
Where,
class C is instance of class Meta
"class C" is class object which is instance of "class Meta"
Like any other object(instance) "class C" has access it's attributes/methods defined in it's class "class Meta"
So, decoding "C.foo()" . "C" is instance of "Meta" and "foo" is method calling through instance of "Meta" which is "C".
First argument of method "foo" is reference to instance not class unlike "classmethod"
We can verify as if "class C" is instance of "Class Meta
isinstance(C, Meta)
What is classmethod?
Python methods are said to be bound. As python imposes the restriction that method has to be invoked with instance only.
Sometimes we might want to invoke methods directly through class without any instance (much like static members in java) with out having to create any instance.By default instance is required to call method. As a workaround python provides built-in function classmethod to bind given method to class instead of instance.
As class methods are bound to class. It takes at least one argument which is reference to class itself instead of instance (self)
if built-in function/decorator classmethod is used. First argument
will be reference to class instead of instance
class ClassMethodDemo:
#classmethod
def foo(cls):
print(f'cls is ClassMethodDemo: {cls is ClassMethodDemo}')
As we have used "classmethod" we call method "foo" without creating any instance as follows
ClassMethodDemo.foo()
Above method call will return True. Since first argument cls is indeed reference to "ClassMethodDemo"
Summary:
Classmethod's receive first argument which is "a reference to class(traditionally referred as cls) itself"
Methods of meta-classes are not classmethods. Methods of Meta-classes receive first argument which is "a reference to instance(traditionally referred as self) not class"