Confused about __str__ on list in Python
Python has two different ways to convert an object to a string: str()
and repr()
. Printing an object uses str()
; printing a list containing an object uses str()
for the list itself, but the implementation of list.__str__()
calls repr()
for the individual items.
So you should also overwrite __repr__()
. A simple
__repr__ = __str__
at the end of the class body will do the trick.
Because of the infinite superiority of Python over Java, Python has not one, but two toString operations.
One is __str__
, the other is __repr__
__str__
will return a human readable string.
__repr__
will return an internal representation.
__repr__
can be invoked on an object by calling repr(obj)
or by using backticks `obj`
.
When printing lists as well as other container classes, the contained elements will be printed using __repr__
.