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Special handling of descriptor field like in dataclasses #1232
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I was wondering when they added it, because I didn't have it on my radar at all, but it looks like 3.10 – if the docs are to be trusted (3.9 doesn't mention descriptors at all). Does anyone have a clue how much work it would be to integrate this? |
I checked the source code of `dataclasses` and the only mention of descriptors is in this line:
https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/718dbd4cd33a204e12fb747a09b73c4c4ac1b55f/Lib/dataclasses.py#L349
Maybe defining the method `__set_name__` is enough to instantiate the descriptor and make it work.
…On 3 February 2024 08:02:38 GMT+01:00, Hynek Schlawack ***@***.***> wrote:
I was wondering when they added it, because I didn't have it on my radar at all, but it looks like 3.10 – if the docs are to be trusted (3.9 doesn't mention descriptors at all).
Does anyone have a clue how much work it would be to integrate this?
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#1232 (comment)
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|
I'm in favor of fixing this on philosophical grounds (I'm bothered by dataclasses doing a thing better than us) ;) |
Yes, it's very irritating. |
Maybe it's not too hard to implement, because annotating the descriptor as `ClassVar` is enough to make it work:
```python
# attrs: THIS WORKS
from typing import ClassVar
@define(slots=False)
class InventoryItem3:
quantity_on_hand: ClassVar[IntConversionDescriptor] = IntConversionDescriptor(default=100)
i3 = InventoryItem3()
print(i3.quantity_on_hand) # 100
i3.quantity_on_hand = 2.5
print(i3.quantity_on_hand) # 2
```
…On 4 February 2024 18:04:49 GMT+01:00, Hynek Schlawack ***@***.***> wrote:
Yes, it's very irritating.
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#1232 (comment)
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The problem with setting them as I don't think it would be that difficult to implement the same kind of special treament as Dataclass. I managed to make it work by doing some hacking in a import pytest
from attrs import define, field
from attrs.exceptions import FrozenInstanceError
from attr import Attribute
import attrs
from dataclasses import dataclass, field as dc_field
class Descriptor:
def __set_name__(self, owner, name):
print(f"setting #{owner} #{name}")
self.name = name
self.private_name = f"_{name}"
def __get__(self, instance, owner):
print(f"Getting #{instance} #{owner}")
if instance is None:
return self
attr = getattr(instance, self.private_name, None)
if attr is None or attr is self:
return None
return attr
def __set__(self, instance, value):
print(f"Setting #{instance} #{value}")
setattr(instance, self.private_name, value)
def raise_on_used(self):
raise ValueError("Tried to use a field not set")
def test_descriptor_with_attrs():
def use_descriptor(
cls: type,
fields: list[attrs.Attribute]
) -> list[attrs.Attribute]:
new_fields = []
for def_field in fields:
descriptor = def_field.type
if (hasattr(descriptor, "__get__") or
hasattr(descriptor, "__set__") or
hasattr(descriptor, "__delete__")):
if not hasattr(descriptor, "__set_name__"):
raise ValueError("Descriptor must have __set_name__ to work with this transformer")
descriptor_instance = descriptor() #type: ignore
getattr(descriptor_instance, "__set_name__")(cls, def_field.name)
setattr(cls, def_field.name, descriptor_instance)
# create a "shadow" field that accepts the value in the init
ca = field(
init=True,
repr=False,
default=None,
)
a = Attribute.from_counting_attr( #type: ignore
name=f"_{def_field.name}",
ca=ca,
type="Optional[Any]",
)
new_fields.append(a)
else:
new_fields.append(def_field)
return new_fields
@define(slots=False, field_transformer=use_descriptor)
class Demo:
int_field: int
descriptor_field: Descriptor = Descriptor()
demo = Demo(int_field=1)
assert demo.descriptor_field is None
demo2 = Demo(int_field=2, descriptor_field=2)
assert demo2.descriptor_field == 2
def test_descriptor_with_dataclass():
@dataclass()
class Demo:
int_field: int
descriptor_field: Descriptor = Descriptor()
demo = Demo(int_field=1)
assert demo.descriptor_field is None
demo2 = Demo(int_field=2, descriptor_field=2)
assert demo2.descriptor_field == 2 The "unsolved" part of this with this hack is actually around That seems relatively solvable - special case "descriptor" fields in the generated
If you're okay with an approach similar to this I'm happy to send a PR. I haven't done much checking into edge cases though, so not sure what the knock-on effects would be. |
dataclass
dataclasses handle descriptor fields differently from other fields, so the descriptor type is not lost when assigning:https://docs.python.org/3/library/dataclasses.html#descriptor-typed-fields
This does not work in
attrs
, it's a pity because it could be used as an alternative toconverters
called with the instance (#1108).Previous discussion about this was not very conclusive (#881).
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