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Georg Brandlafd05da2008-06-07 17:11:00 +00001:mod:`abc` --- Abstract Base Classes
2====================================
3
4.. module:: abc
5 :synopsis: Abstract base classes according to PEP 3119.
6.. moduleauthor:: Guido van Rossum
7.. sectionauthor:: Georg Brandl
8.. much of the content adapted from docstrings
9
10.. versionadded:: 2.6
11
12This module provides the infrastructure for defining abstract base classes
13(ABCs) in Python, as outlined in :pep:`3119`; see the PEP for why this
14was added to Python. (See also, :pep:`3141` regarding a type hierarchy
15for numbers based on ABCs.)
16
17The :mod:`collections` module has some concrete classes that derive from
18ABCs; these can, of course, be further derived. In addition the
19:mod:`collections` module has some ABCs that can be used to test whether
20a class or instance provides a particular interface, for example, is it
21hashable or a mapping.
22
23
24This module provides the following class:
25
26.. class:: ABCMeta
27
28 Metaclass for defining Abstract Base Classes (ABCs).
29
30 Use this metaclass to create an ABC. An ABC can be subclassed directly, and
31 then acts as a mix-in class. You can also register unrelated concrete
32 classes (even built-in classes) and unrelated ABCs as "virtual subclasses" --
33 these and their descendants will be considered subclasses of the registering
34 ABC by the built-in :func:`issubclass` function, but the registering ABC
35 won't show up in their MRO (Method Resolution Order) nor will method
36 implementations defined by the registering ABC be callable (not even via
37 :func:`super`). [#]_
38
39 Classes created with a metaclass of :class:`ABCMeta` have the following method:
40
41 .. method:: register(subclass)
42
43 Register *subclass* as a "virtual subclass" of this ABC. For
44 example::
45
46 from abc import ABCMeta
47
48 class MyABC:
49 __metaclass__ = ABCMeta
50
51 MyABC.register(tuple)
52
53 assert issubclass(tuple, MyABC)
54 assert isinstance((), MyABC)
55
56 You can also override this method in an abstract base class:
57
58 .. method:: __subclasshook__(subclass)
59
60 (Must be defined as a class method.)
61
62 Check whether *subclass* is considered a subclass of this ABC. This means
63 that you can customize the behavior of ``issubclass`` further without the
64 need to call :meth:`register` on every class you want to consider a
65 subclass of the ABC. (This class method is called from the
66 :meth:`__subclasscheck__` method of the ABC.)
67
68 This method should return ``True``, ``False`` or ``NotImplemented``. If
69 it returns ``True``, the *subclass* is considered a subclass of this ABC.
70 If it returns ``False``, the *subclass* is not considered a subclass of
71 this ABC, even if it would normally be one. If it returns
72 ``NotImplemented``, the subclass check is continued with the usual
73 mechanism.
74
75 .. XXX explain the "usual mechanism"
76
77
78 For a demonstration of these concepts, look at this example ABC definition::
79
80 class Foo(object):
81 def __getitem__(self, index):
82 ...
83 def __len__(self):
84 ...
85 def get_iterator(self):
86 return iter(self)
87
88 class MyIterable:
89 __metaclass__ = ABCMeta
90
91 @abstractmethod
92 def __iter__(self):
93 while False:
94 yield None
95
96 def get_iterator(self):
97 return self.__iter__()
98
99 @classmethod
100 def __subclasshook__(cls, C):
101 if cls is MyIterable:
102 if any("__iter__" in B.__dict__ for B in C.__mro__):
103 return True
104 return NotImplemented
105
106 MyIterable.register(Foo)
107
108 The ABC ``MyIterable`` defines the standard iterable method,
109 :meth:`__iter__`, as an abstract method. The implementation given here can
110 still be called from subclasses. The :meth:`get_iterator` method is also
111 part of the ``MyIterable`` abstract base class, but it does not have to be
112 overridden in non-abstract derived classes.
113
114 The :meth:`__subclasshook__` class method defined here says that any class
115 that has an :meth:`__iter__` method in its :attr:`__dict__` (or in that of
116 one of its base classes, accessed via the :attr:`__mro__` list) is
117 considered a ``MyIterable`` too.
118
119 Finally, the last line makes ``Foo`` a virtual subclass of ``MyIterable``,
120 even though it does not define an :meth:`__iter__` method (it uses the
121 old-style iterable protocol, defined in terms of :meth:`__len__` and
122 :meth:`__getitem__`). Note that this will not make ``get_iterator``
123 available as a method of ``Foo``, so it is provided separately.
124
125
126It also provides the following decorators:
127
128.. function:: abstractmethod(function)
129
130 A decorator indicating abstract methods.
131
132 Using this decorator requires that the class's metaclass is :class:`ABCMeta` or
133 is derived from it.
134 A class that has a metaclass derived from :class:`ABCMeta`
135 cannot be instantiated unless all of its abstract methods and
136 properties are overridden.
137 The abstract methods can be called using any of the the normal 'super' call
138 mechanisms.
139
140 Dynamically adding abstract methods to a class, or attempting to modify the
141 abstraction status of a method or class once it is created, are not
142 supported. The :func:`abstractmethod` only affects subclasses derived using
143 regular inheritance; "virtual subclasses" registered with the ABC's
144 :meth:`register` method are not affected.
145
146 Usage::
147
148 class C:
149 __metaclass__ = ABCMeta
150 @abstractmethod
151 def my_abstract_method(self, ...):
152 ...
153
154 .. note::
155
156 Unlike C++'s pure virtual functions, or Java abstract methods, these abstract
157 methods may have an implementation. This implementation can be
158 called via the :func:`super` mechanism from the class that
159 overrides it. This could be useful as an end-point for a
160 super-call in a framework that uses cooperative
161 multiple-inheritance.
162
163
164.. function:: abstractproperty(fget[, fset[, fdel[, doc]]])
165
166 A subclass of the built-in :func:`property`, indicating an abstract property.
167
168 Using this function requires that the class's metaclass is :class:`ABCMeta` or
169 is derived from it.
170 A class that has a metaclass derived from :class:`ABCMeta` cannot be
171 instantiated unless all of its abstract methods and properties are overridden.
172 The abstract properties can be called using any of the normal
173 'super' call mechanisms.
174
175 Usage::
176
177 class C:
178 __metaclass__ = ABCMeta
179 @abstractproperty
180 def my_abstract_property(self):
181 ...
182
183 This defines a read-only property; you can also define a read-write abstract
184 property using the 'long' form of property declaration::
185
186 class C:
187 __metaclass__ = ABCMeta
188 def getx(self): ...
189 def setx(self, value): ...
190 x = abstractproperty(getx, setx)
191
192.. rubric:: Footnotes
193
194.. [#] C++ programmers should note that Python's virtual base class
195 concept is not the same as C++'s.