Why do I get AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'something'?
Solution 1:
NoneType means that instead of an instance of whatever Class or Object you think you're working with, you've actually got None
. That usually means that an assignment or function call up above failed or returned an unexpected result.
Solution 2:
You have a variable that is equal to None and you're attempting to access an attribute of it called 'something'.
foo = None
foo.something = 1
or
foo = None
print(foo.something)
Both will yield an AttributeError: 'NoneType'
Solution 3:
Others have explained what NoneType
is and a common way of ending up with it (i.e., failure to return a value from a function).
Another common reason you have None
where you don't expect it is assignment of an in-place operation on a mutable object. For example:
mylist = mylist.sort()
The sort()
method of a list sorts the list in-place, that is, mylist
is modified. But the actual return value of the method is None
and not the list sorted. So you've just assigned None
to mylist
. If you next try to do, say, mylist.append(1)
Python will give you this error.