2

I have this code;

class NumberDescriptor(object):
    def __get__(self, instance, owner):
        name = (hasattr(self, "name") and self.name)
        if not name:
            name = [attr for attr in dir(owner) if getattr(owner,attr) is self][0]
            self.name = name
        return getattr(instance, '_' + name)
    def __set__(self,instance, value):
        name = (hasattr(self, "name") and self.name)
        if not name:
            owner = type(instance)
            name = [attr for attr in dir(owner) if getattr(owner,attr) is self][0]
            self.name = name
        setattr(instance, '_' + name, int(value))

class Insan(object):
    yas = NumberDescriptor()

a = Insan()
print a.yas
a.yas = "osman"
print a.yas

I am getting maximum recursion depth error in the line name = [attr for attr in dir(owner) if getattr(owner,attr) is self][0]. I want that line to get me the name of variable used for current descriptor instance. Can anyone see what am I doing wrong here?

yasar
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1 Answers1

11

The getattr() call is calling your __get__.

One way to work around this is to explicitly call through the superclass, object:

object.__getattribute__(instance, name)

Or, clearer:

instance.__dict__[name]
Charles Duffy
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    `instance.__dict__[name]` might fail for non-data descriptors in general case. `NumberDescriptor` is a data descriptor so it should work in this case. – jfs Aug 28 '12 at 17:14