Convert a python 'type' object to a string
print(type(some_object).__name__)
If that doesn't suit you, use this:
print(some_instance.__class__.__name__)
Example:
class A:
pass
print(type(A()))
# prints <type 'instance'>
print(A().__class__.__name__)
# prints A
Also, it seems there are differences with type()
when using new-style classes vs old-style (that is, inheritance from object
). For a new-style class, type(someObject).__name__
returns the name, and for old-style classes it returns instance
.
In case you want to use str()
and a custom str method. This also works for repr.
class TypeProxy:
def __init__(self, _type):
self._type = _type
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
return self._type(*args, **kwargs)
def __str__(self):
return self._type.__name__
def __repr__(self):
return "TypeProxy(%s)" % (repr(self._type),)
>>> str(TypeProxy(str))
'str'
>>> str(TypeProxy(type("")))
'str'
print("My type is %s" % type(someObject)) # the type in python
or...
print("My type is %s" % type(someObject).__name__) # the object's type (the class you defined)
>>> class A(object): pass
>>> e = A()
>>> e
<__main__.A object at 0xb6d464ec>
>>> print type(e)
<class '__main__.A'>
>>> print type(e).__name__
A
>>>
what do you mean by convert into a string? you can define your own repr and str_ methods:
>>> class A(object):
def __repr__(self):
return 'hei, i am A or B or whatever'
>>> e = A()
>>> e
hei, i am A or B or whatever
>>> str(e)
hei, i am A or B or whatever
or i dont know..please add explainations ;)