Python inheritance - how to disable a function
In C++ you can disable a function in parent's class by declaring it as private in the child class. How can this be done in Python? I.E. How can I hide parent's function from child's public interface?
There really aren't any true "private" attributes or methods in Python. One thing you can do is simply override the method you don't want in the subclass, and raise an exception:
>>> class Foo( object ):
... def foo( self ):
... print 'FOO!'
...
>>> class Bar( Foo ):
... def foo( self ):
... raise AttributeError( "'Bar' object has no attribute 'foo'" )
...
>>> b = Bar()
>>> b.foo()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<interactive input>", line 1, in <module>
File "<interactive input>", line 3, in foo
AttributeError: 'Bar' object has no attribute 'foo'
kurosch's method of solving the problem isn't quite correct, because you can still use b.foo
without getting an AttributeError
. If you don't invoke the function, no error occurs. Here are two ways that I can think to do this:
import doctest
class Foo(object):
"""
>>> Foo().foo()
foo
"""
def foo(self): print 'foo'
def fu(self): print 'fu'
class Bar(object):
"""
>>> b = Bar()
>>> b.foo()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError
>>> hasattr(b, 'foo')
False
>>> hasattr(b, 'fu')
True
"""
def __init__(self): self._wrapped = Foo()
def __getattr__(self, attr_name):
if attr_name == 'foo': raise AttributeError
return getattr(self._wrapped, attr_name)
class Baz(Foo):
"""
>>> b = Baz()
>>> b.foo() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError...
>>> hasattr(b, 'foo')
False
>>> hasattr(b, 'fu')
True
"""
foo = property()
if __name__ == '__main__':
doctest.testmod()
Bar uses the "wrap" pattern to restrict access to the wrapped object. Martelli has a good talk dealing with this. Baz uses the property built-in to implement the descriptor protocol for the attribute to override.