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Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001
2:mod:`inspect` --- Inspect live objects
3=======================================
4
5.. module:: inspect
6 :synopsis: Extract information and source code from live objects.
7.. moduleauthor:: Ka-Ping Yee <ping@lfw.org>
8.. sectionauthor:: Ka-Ping Yee <ping@lfw.org>
9
10
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000011The :mod:`inspect` module provides several useful functions to help get
12information about live objects such as modules, classes, methods, functions,
13tracebacks, frame objects, and code objects. For example, it can help you
14examine the contents of a class, retrieve the source code of a method, extract
15and format the argument list for a function, or get all the information you need
16to display a detailed traceback.
17
18There are four main kinds of services provided by this module: type checking,
19getting source code, inspecting classes and functions, and examining the
20interpreter stack.
21
22
23.. _inspect-types:
24
25Types and members
26-----------------
27
28The :func:`getmembers` function retrieves the members of an object such as a
29class or module. The eleven functions whose names begin with "is" are mainly
30provided as convenient choices for the second argument to :func:`getmembers`.
31They also help you determine when you can expect to find the following special
32attributes:
33
Georg Brandl55ac8f02007-09-01 13:51:09 +000034+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
35| Type | Attribute | Description |
36+===========+=================+===========================+
37| module | __doc__ | documentation string |
38+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
39| | __file__ | filename (missing for |
40| | | built-in modules) |
41+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
42| class | __doc__ | documentation string |
43+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
44| | __module__ | name of module in which |
45| | | this class was defined |
46+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
47| method | __doc__ | documentation string |
48+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
49| | __name__ | name with which this |
50| | | method was defined |
51+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
Christian Heimesff737952007-11-27 10:40:20 +000052| | __func__ | function object |
Georg Brandl55ac8f02007-09-01 13:51:09 +000053| | | containing implementation |
54| | | of method |
55+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
Christian Heimesff737952007-11-27 10:40:20 +000056| | __self__ | instance to which this |
Georg Brandl55ac8f02007-09-01 13:51:09 +000057| | | method is bound, or |
58| | | ``None`` |
59+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
60| function | __doc__ | documentation string |
61+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
62| | __name__ | name with which this |
63| | | function was defined |
64+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
65| | __code__ | code object containing |
66| | | compiled function |
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +000067| | | :term:`bytecode` |
Georg Brandl55ac8f02007-09-01 13:51:09 +000068+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
69| | __defaults__ | tuple of any default |
70| | | values for arguments |
71+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
72| | __globals__ | global namespace in which |
73| | | this function was defined |
74+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
75| traceback | tb_frame | frame object at this |
76| | | level |
77+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
78| | tb_lasti | index of last attempted |
79| | | instruction in bytecode |
80+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
81| | tb_lineno | current line number in |
82| | | Python source code |
83+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
84| | tb_next | next inner traceback |
85| | | object (called by this |
86| | | level) |
87+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
88| frame | f_back | next outer frame object |
89| | | (this frame's caller) |
90+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
91| | f_builtins | built-in namespace seen |
92| | | by this frame |
93+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
94| | f_code | code object being |
95| | | executed in this frame |
96+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
97| | f_exc_traceback | traceback if raised in |
98| | | this frame, or ``None`` |
99+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
100| | f_exc_type | exception type if raised |
101| | | in this frame, or |
102| | | ``None`` |
103+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
104| | f_exc_value | exception value if raised |
105| | | in this frame, or |
106| | | ``None`` |
107+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
108| | f_globals | global namespace seen by |
109| | | this frame |
110+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
111| | f_lasti | index of last attempted |
112| | | instruction in bytecode |
113+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
114| | f_lineno | current line number in |
115| | | Python source code |
116+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
117| | f_locals | local namespace seen by |
118| | | this frame |
119+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
120| | f_restricted | 0 or 1 if frame is in |
121| | | restricted execution mode |
122+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
123| | f_trace | tracing function for this |
124| | | frame, or ``None`` |
125+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
126| code | co_argcount | number of arguments (not |
127| | | including \* or \*\* |
128| | | args) |
129+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
130| | co_code | string of raw compiled |
131| | | bytecode |
132+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
133| | co_consts | tuple of constants used |
134| | | in the bytecode |
135+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
136| | co_filename | name of file in which |
137| | | this code object was |
138| | | created |
139+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
140| | co_firstlineno | number of first line in |
141| | | Python source code |
142+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
143| | co_flags | bitmap: 1=optimized ``|`` |
144| | | 2=newlocals ``|`` 4=\*arg |
145| | | ``|`` 8=\*\*arg |
146+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
147| | co_lnotab | encoded mapping of line |
148| | | numbers to bytecode |
149| | | indices |
150+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
151| | co_name | name with which this code |
152| | | object was defined |
153+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
154| | co_names | tuple of names of local |
155| | | variables |
156+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
157| | co_nlocals | number of local variables |
158+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
159| | co_stacksize | virtual machine stack |
160| | | space required |
161+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
162| | co_varnames | tuple of names of |
163| | | arguments and local |
164| | | variables |
165+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
166| builtin | __doc__ | documentation string |
167+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
168| | __name__ | original name of this |
169| | | function or method |
170+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
171| | __self__ | instance to which a |
172| | | method is bound, or |
173| | | ``None`` |
174+-----------+-----------------+---------------------------+
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000175
176
177.. function:: getmembers(object[, predicate])
178
179 Return all the members of an object in a list of (name, value) pairs sorted by
180 name. If the optional *predicate* argument is supplied, only members for which
181 the predicate returns a true value are included.
182
Christian Heimes7f044312008-01-06 17:05:40 +0000183 .. note::
184
185 :func:`getmembers` does not return metaclass attributes when the argument
186 is a class (this behavior is inherited from the :func:`dir` function).
187
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000188
189.. function:: getmoduleinfo(path)
190
191 Return a tuple of values that describe how Python will interpret the file
192 identified by *path* if it is a module, or ``None`` if it would not be
193 identified as a module. The return tuple is ``(name, suffix, mode, mtype)``,
194 where *name* is the name of the module without the name of any enclosing
195 package, *suffix* is the trailing part of the file name (which may not be a
196 dot-delimited extension), *mode* is the :func:`open` mode that would be used
197 (``'r'`` or ``'rb'``), and *mtype* is an integer giving the type of the
198 module. *mtype* will have a value which can be compared to the constants
199 defined in the :mod:`imp` module; see the documentation for that module for
200 more information on module types.
201
202
203.. function:: getmodulename(path)
204
205 Return the name of the module named by the file *path*, without including the
206 names of enclosing packages. This uses the same algorithm as the interpreter
207 uses when searching for modules. If the name cannot be matched according to the
208 interpreter's rules, ``None`` is returned.
209
210
211.. function:: ismodule(object)
212
213 Return true if the object is a module.
214
215
216.. function:: isclass(object)
217
218 Return true if the object is a class.
219
220
221.. function:: ismethod(object)
222
223 Return true if the object is a method.
224
225
226.. function:: isfunction(object)
227
Christian Heimesd8654cf2007-12-02 15:22:16 +0000228 Return true if the object is a Python function or unnamed (:term:`lambda`) function.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000229
230
231.. function:: istraceback(object)
232
233 Return true if the object is a traceback.
234
235
236.. function:: isframe(object)
237
238 Return true if the object is a frame.
239
240
241.. function:: iscode(object)
242
243 Return true if the object is a code.
244
245
246.. function:: isbuiltin(object)
247
248 Return true if the object is a built-in function.
249
250
251.. function:: isroutine(object)
252
253 Return true if the object is a user-defined or built-in function or method.
254
255
256.. function:: ismethoddescriptor(object)
257
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000258 Return true if the object is a method descriptor, but not if :func:`ismethod`
259 or :func:`isclass` or :func:`isfunction` are true.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000260
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000261 This is new as of Python 2.2, and, for example, is true of
262 ``int.__add__``. An object passing this test has a :attr:`__get__` attribute
263 but not a :attr:`__set__` attribute, but beyond that the set of attributes
264 varies. :attr:`__name__` is usually sensible, and :attr:`__doc__` often is.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000265
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000266 Methods implemented via descriptors that also pass one of the other tests
267 return false from the :func:`ismethoddescriptor` test, simply because the
268 other tests promise more -- you can, e.g., count on having the
Christian Heimesff737952007-11-27 10:40:20 +0000269 :attr:`__func__` attribute (etc) when an object passes :func:`ismethod`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000270
271
272.. function:: isdatadescriptor(object)
273
274 Return true if the object is a data descriptor.
275
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000276 Data descriptors have both a :attr:`__get__` and a :attr:`__set__` attribute.
277 Examples are properties (defined in Python), getsets, and members. The
278 latter two are defined in C and there are more specific tests available for
279 those types, which is robust across Python implementations. Typically, data
280 descriptors will also have :attr:`__name__` and :attr:`__doc__` attributes
281 (properties, getsets, and members have both of these attributes), but this is
282 not guaranteed.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000283
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000284
285.. function:: isgetsetdescriptor(object)
286
287 Return true if the object is a getset descriptor.
288
289 getsets are attributes defined in extension modules via ``PyGetSetDef``
290 structures. For Python implementations without such types, this method will
291 always return ``False``.
292
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000293
294.. function:: ismemberdescriptor(object)
295
296 Return true if the object is a member descriptor.
297
298 Member descriptors are attributes defined in extension modules via
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +0000299 ``PyMemberDef`` structures. For Python implementations without such types,
300 this method will always return ``False``.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000301
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000302
303.. _inspect-source:
304
305Retrieving source code
306----------------------
307
308
309.. function:: getdoc(object)
310
311 Get the documentation string for an object. All tabs are expanded to spaces. To
312 clean up docstrings that are indented to line up with blocks of code, any
313 whitespace than can be uniformly removed from the second line onwards is
314 removed.
315
316
317.. function:: getcomments(object)
318
319 Return in a single string any lines of comments immediately preceding the
320 object's source code (for a class, function, or method), or at the top of the
321 Python source file (if the object is a module).
322
323
324.. function:: getfile(object)
325
326 Return the name of the (text or binary) file in which an object was defined.
327 This will fail with a :exc:`TypeError` if the object is a built-in module,
328 class, or function.
329
330
331.. function:: getmodule(object)
332
333 Try to guess which module an object was defined in.
334
335
336.. function:: getsourcefile(object)
337
338 Return the name of the Python source file in which an object was defined. This
339 will fail with a :exc:`TypeError` if the object is a built-in module, class, or
340 function.
341
342
343.. function:: getsourcelines(object)
344
345 Return a list of source lines and starting line number for an object. The
346 argument may be a module, class, method, function, traceback, frame, or code
347 object. The source code is returned as a list of the lines corresponding to the
348 object and the line number indicates where in the original source file the first
349 line of code was found. An :exc:`IOError` is raised if the source code cannot
350 be retrieved.
351
352
353.. function:: getsource(object)
354
355 Return the text of the source code for an object. The argument may be a module,
356 class, method, function, traceback, frame, or code object. The source code is
357 returned as a single string. An :exc:`IOError` is raised if the source code
358 cannot be retrieved.
359
360
361.. _inspect-classes-functions:
362
363Classes and functions
364---------------------
365
366
367.. function:: getclasstree(classes[, unique])
368
369 Arrange the given list of classes into a hierarchy of nested lists. Where a
370 nested list appears, it contains classes derived from the class whose entry
371 immediately precedes the list. Each entry is a 2-tuple containing a class and a
372 tuple of its base classes. If the *unique* argument is true, exactly one entry
373 appears in the returned structure for each class in the given list. Otherwise,
374 classes using multiple inheritance and their descendants will appear multiple
375 times.
376
377
378.. function:: getargspec(func)
379
380 Get the names and default values of a function's arguments. A tuple of four
381 things is returned: ``(args, varargs, varkw, defaults)``. *args* is a list of
Georg Brandl138bcb52007-09-12 19:04:21 +0000382 the argument names. *varargs* and *varkw* are the names of the ``*`` and
383 ``**`` arguments or ``None``. *defaults* is a tuple of default argument
384 values or None if there are no default arguments; if this tuple has *n*
385 elements, they correspond to the last *n* elements listed in *args*.
386
387 .. deprecated:: 3.0
388 Use :func:`getfullargspec` instead, which provides information about
389 keyword-only arguments.
390
391
392.. function:: getfullargspec(func)
393
394 Get the names and default values of a function's arguments. A tuple of seven
395 things is returned:
396
397 ``(args, varargs, varkw, defaults, kwonlyargs, kwonlydefaults, annotations)``
398
399 *args* is a list of the argument names. *varargs* and *varkw* are the names
400 of the ``*`` and ``**`` arguments or ``None``. *defaults* is an n-tuple of
401 the default values of the last n arguments. *kwonlyargs* is a list of
402 keyword-only argument names. *kwonlydefaults* is a dictionary mapping names
403 from kwonlyargs to defaults. *annotations* is a dictionary mapping argument
404 names to annotations.
405
406 The first four items in the tuple correspond to :func:`getargspec`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000407
408
409.. function:: getargvalues(frame)
410
411 Get information about arguments passed into a particular frame. A tuple of four
412 things is returned: ``(args, varargs, varkw, locals)``. *args* is a list of the
413 argument names (it may contain nested lists). *varargs* and *varkw* are the
414 names of the ``*`` and ``**`` arguments or ``None``. *locals* is the locals
415 dictionary of the given frame.
416
417
418.. function:: formatargspec(args[, varargs, varkw, defaults, formatarg, formatvarargs, formatvarkw, formatvalue, join])
419
420 Format a pretty argument spec from the four values returned by
421 :func:`getargspec`. The format\* arguments are the corresponding optional
422 formatting functions that are called to turn names and values into strings.
423
424
425.. function:: formatargvalues(args[, varargs, varkw, locals, formatarg, formatvarargs, formatvarkw, formatvalue, join])
426
427 Format a pretty argument spec from the four values returned by
428 :func:`getargvalues`. The format\* arguments are the corresponding optional
429 formatting functions that are called to turn names and values into strings.
430
431
432.. function:: getmro(cls)
433
434 Return a tuple of class cls's base classes, including cls, in method resolution
435 order. No class appears more than once in this tuple. Note that the method
436 resolution order depends on cls's type. Unless a very peculiar user-defined
437 metatype is in use, cls will be the first element of the tuple.
438
439
440.. _inspect-stack:
441
442The interpreter stack
443---------------------
444
445When the following functions return "frame records," each record is a tuple of
446six items: the frame object, the filename, the line number of the current line,
447the function name, a list of lines of context from the source code, and the
448index of the current line within that list.
449
450.. warning::
451
452 Keeping references to frame objects, as found in the first element of the frame
453 records these functions return, can cause your program to create reference
454 cycles. Once a reference cycle has been created, the lifespan of all objects
455 which can be accessed from the objects which form the cycle can become much
456 longer even if Python's optional cycle detector is enabled. If such cycles must
457 be created, it is important to ensure they are explicitly broken to avoid the
458 delayed destruction of objects and increased memory consumption which occurs.
459
460 Though the cycle detector will catch these, destruction of the frames (and local
461 variables) can be made deterministic by removing the cycle in a
462 :keyword:`finally` clause. This is also important if the cycle detector was
463 disabled when Python was compiled or using :func:`gc.disable`. For example::
464
465 def handle_stackframe_without_leak():
466 frame = inspect.currentframe()
467 try:
468 # do something with the frame
469 finally:
470 del frame
471
472The optional *context* argument supported by most of these functions specifies
473the number of lines of context to return, which are centered around the current
474line.
475
476
477.. function:: getframeinfo(frame[, context])
478
479 Get information about a frame or traceback object. A 5-tuple is returned, the
480 last five elements of the frame's frame record.
481
482
483.. function:: getouterframes(frame[, context])
484
485 Get a list of frame records for a frame and all outer frames. These frames
486 represent the calls that lead to the creation of *frame*. The first entry in the
487 returned list represents *frame*; the last entry represents the outermost call
488 on *frame*'s stack.
489
490
491.. function:: getinnerframes(traceback[, context])
492
493 Get a list of frame records for a traceback's frame and all inner frames. These
494 frames represent calls made as a consequence of *frame*. The first entry in the
495 list represents *traceback*; the last entry represents where the exception was
496 raised.
497
498
499.. function:: currentframe()
500
501 Return the frame object for the caller's stack frame.
502
503
504.. function:: stack([context])
505
506 Return a list of frame records for the caller's stack. The first entry in the
507 returned list represents the caller; the last entry represents the outermost
508 call on the stack.
509
510
511.. function:: trace([context])
512
513 Return a list of frame records for the stack between the current frame and the
514 frame in which an exception currently being handled was raised in. The first
515 entry in the list represents the caller; the last entry represents where the
516 exception was raised.
517