When should I use @classmethod and when def method(self)?
Your guess is correct - you understand how classmethod
s work.
The why is that these methods can be called both on an instance OR on the class (in both cases, the class object will be passed as the first argument):
class Dummy(object):
@classmethod
def some_function(cls,*args,**kwargs):
print cls
#both of these will have exactly the same effect
Dummy.some_function()
Dummy().some_function()
On the use of these on instances: There are at least two main uses for calling a classmethod on an instance:
-
self.some_function()
will call the version ofsome_function
on the actual type ofself
, rather than the class in which that call happens to appear (and won't need attention if the class is renamed); and - In cases where
some_function
is necessary to implement some protocol, but is useful to call on the class object alone.
The difference with staticmethod
: There is another way of defining methods that don't access instance data, called staticmethod
. That creates a method which does not receive an implicit first argument at all; accordingly it won't be passed any information about the instance or class on which it was called.
In [6]: class Foo(object): some_static = staticmethod(lambda x: x+1)
In [7]: Foo.some_static(1)
Out[7]: 2
In [8]: Foo().some_static(1)
Out[8]: 2
In [9]: class Bar(Foo): some_static = staticmethod(lambda x: x*2)
In [10]: Bar.some_static(1)
Out[10]: 2
In [11]: Bar().some_static(1)
Out[11]: 2
The main use I've found for it is to adapt an existing function (which doesn't expect to receive a self
) to be a method on a class (or object).