Using a class as a data container
If you're really never defining any class methods, a dict or a namedtuple make far more sense, in my opinion. Simple+builtin is good! To each his own, though.
Background
A summary of alternative attribute-based, data containers was presented by R. Hettinger at the SF Python's 2017 Holiday meetup. See his tweet and his slide deck. He also gave a talk at PyCon 2018 on dataclasses.
Other data container types are mentioned in this article and predominantly in Python 3 documentation (see links below).
Here is a discussion on the python-ideas mailing list on adding recordclass
to the standard library.
Options
Alternatives in the Standard Library
collections.namedtuple
: tuple with attributes (see seminal recipe)typing.NamedTuple
: sub-classable tuple (see this post comparing it withnamedtuple
)types.SimpleNamespace
: simple class w/optional class declarationtypes.MappingProxy
: read-only dictenum.Enum
: constrained collection of related constants (does behave like a class)dataclasses.dataclass
: mutable namedtuple with default/boilerplate-less classes
External options
- records: mutable namedtuple (see also recordclass)
- bunch: add attribute access to dicts (inspiration for
SimpleNamedspace
; see alsomunch
(py3)) - box: wrap dicts with dot-style lookup functionality
- attrdict: access elements from a mapping as keys or attributes
- fields: remove boilerplate from container classes.
- namedlist: mutable, tuple-like containers with defaults by E. Smith
- misc.: posts on making your own custom struct, object, bunch, dict proxy, etc.
Which one?
Deciding which option to use depends on the situation (see Examples below). Usually an old fashioned mutable dictionary or immutable namedtuple is good enough. Data classes are the newest addition (Python 3.7a) offering both mutability and optional immutability, with promise of reduced boilerplate as inspired by the attrs project.
Examples
import typing as typ
import collections as ct
import dataclasses as dc
# Problem: You want a simple container to hold personal data.
# Solution: Try a NamedTuple.
>>> class Person(typ.NamedTuple):
... name: str
... age: int
>>> a = Person("bob", 30)
>>> a
Person(name='bob', age=30)
# Problem: You need to change age each year, but namedtuples are immutable.
# Solution: Use assignable attributes of a traditional class.
>>> class Person:
... def __init__(self, name, age):
... self.name = name
... self.age = age
>>> b = Person("bob", 30)
>>> b.age = 31
>>> b
<__main__.Person at 0x4e27128>
# Problem: You lost the pretty repr and want to add comparison features.
# Solution: Use included repr and eq features from the new dataclasses.
>>> @dc.dataclass(eq=True)
... class Person:
... name: str
... age: int
>>> c = Person("bob", 30)
>>> c.age = 31
>>> c
Person(name='bob', age=31)
>>> d = Person("dan", 31)
>>> c != d
True
By the way, I think Python 3.7 implemented @dataclass is the simplest and most efficient way to implement classes as data containers.
@dataclass
class Data:
a: list
b: str #default variables go after non default variables
c: bool = False
def func():
return A(a="hello")
print(func())
The output would be :hello
It is too similar to Scala like case class and the easiest way to use a class as a container.