attrs is the Python package that will bring back the joy of writing classes by relieving you from the drudgery of implementing object protocols (aka dunder methods). Trusted by NASA for Mars missions since 2020!
Its main goal is to help you to write concise and correct software without slowing down your code.
attrs would not be possible without our amazing sponsors. Especially those generously supporting us at the The Organization tier and higher:
Please consider joining them to help make attrs’s maintenance more sustainable!
attrs gives you a class decorator and a way to declaratively define the attributes on that class:
>>> from attrs import asdict, define, make_class, Factory
>>> @define
... class SomeClass:
... a_number: int = 42
... list_of_numbers: list[int] = Factory(list)
...
... def hard_math(self, another_number):
... return self.a_number + sum(self.list_of_numbers) * another_number
>>> sc = SomeClass(1, [1, 2, 3])
>>> sc
SomeClass(a_number=1, list_of_numbers=[1, 2, 3])
>>> sc.hard_math(3)
19
>>> sc == SomeClass(1, [1, 2, 3])
True
>>> sc != SomeClass(2, [3, 2, 1])
True
>>> asdict(sc)
{'a_number': 1, 'list_of_numbers': [1, 2, 3]}
>>> SomeClass()
SomeClass(a_number=42, list_of_numbers=[])
>>> C = make_class("C", ["a", "b"])
>>> C("foo", "bar")
C(a='foo', b='bar')
After declaring your attributes, attrs gives you:
- a concise and explicit overview of the class's attributes,
- a nice human-readable
__repr__
, - equality-checking methods,
- an initializer,
- and much more,
without writing dull boilerplate code again and again and without runtime performance penalties.
This example uses attrs's modern APIs that have been introduced in version 20.1.0, and the attrs package import name that has been added in version 21.3.0.
The classic APIs (@attr.s
, attr.ib
, plus their serious-business aliases) and the attr
package import name will remain indefinitely.
Check out On The Core API Names for an in-depth explanation!
No problem!
Types are entirely optional with attrs.
Simply assign attrs.field()
to the attributes instead of annotating them with types:
from attrs import define, field
@define
class SomeClass:
a_number = field(default=42)
list_of_numbers = field(factory=list)
On the tin, attrs might remind you of dataclasses
(and indeed, dataclasses
are a descendant of attrs).
In practice it does a lot more and is more flexible.
For instance it allows you to define special handling of NumPy arrays for equality checks, allows more ways to plug into the initialization process, and allows for stepping through the generated methods using a debugger.
For more details, please refer to our comparison page.
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- Source Code
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- Third-party Extensions
- Get Help: use the
python-attrs
tag on Stack Overflow
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