Calling a base class's classmethod in Python
Asked Answered
B

4

131

Consider the following code:

class Base(object):

    @classmethod
    def do(cls, a):
        print cls, a

class Derived(Base):

    @classmethod
    def do(cls, a):
        print 'In derived!'
        # Base.do(cls, a) -- can't pass `cls`
        Base.do(a)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    d = Derived()
    d.do('hello')

> $ python play.py  
> In derived! 
> <class '__main__.Base'> msg

From Derived.do, how do I call Base.do?

I would normally use super or even the base class name directly if this is a normal object method, but apparently I can't find a way to call the classmethod in the base class.

In the above example, Base.do(a) prints Base class instead of Derived class.

Bortz answered 12/8, 2009 at 23:7 Comment(1)
Related: How to call a parent class's method from child class in python?Kordula
D
146

If you're using a new-style class (i.e. derives from object in Python 2, or always in Python 3), you can do it with super() like this:

super(Derived, cls).do(a)

This is how you would invoke the code in the base class's version of the method (i.e. print cls, a), from the derived class, with cls being set to the derived class.

Deming answered 12/8, 2009 at 23:9 Comment(5)
uh uh .. how come it never occured to me that I can use super on classmethods too.Bortz
this only works (due to a limitation imposed by super) if the base derives from object, right? what do you do if that's not the case?Fenske
Yeah, this only works for new-style classes, which derive from object. (at least in Python 2, but in Py3 I think all classes are new-style, IIRC) Otherwise you have to do Base.do(self, ...), I think, thereby hard-coding the name of the superclass.Deming
Inside Derived.do(), isn't cls the same as Derived?Illstarred
@Illstarred If it is actually an instance of Derived but not of a subclass, then yes.Deming
S
17

this has been a while, but I think I may have found an answer. When you decorate a method to become a classmethod the original unbound method is stored in a property named 'im_func':

class Base(object):
    @classmethod
    def do(cls, a):
        print cls, a

class Derived(Base):

    @classmethod
    def do(cls, a):
        print 'In derived!'
        # Base.do(cls, a) -- can't pass `cls`
        Base.do.im_func(cls, a)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    d = Derived()
    d.do('hello')
Slaveholder answered 15/4, 2011 at 21:1 Comment(2)
Note: This approach works for old style classes where super() doesn't workShrug
Also available as __func__ in python 2.7 and 3Oklahoma
T
3

Building on the answer from @David Z using:

super(Derived, cls).do(a)

Which can be further simplified to:

super(cls, cls).do(a)

I often use classmethods to provide alternative ways to construct my objects. In the example below I use the super functions as above for the class method load that alters the way that the objects are created:

class Base():
    
    def __init__(self,a):
        self.a = a
    
    @classmethod
    def load(cls,a):
        return cls(a=a)
    
class SubBase(Base): 

    @classmethod
    def load(cls,b):
        a = b-1
        return super(cls,cls).load(a=a)
    
base = Base.load(a=1)
print(base)
print(base.a)

sub = SubBase.load(b=3)
print(sub)
print(sub.a)

Output:

<__main__.Base object at 0x128E48B0>
1
<__main__.SubBase object at 0x128E4710>
2
Trictrac answered 13/10, 2020 at 8:9 Comment(3)
Replacing super(Derived, cls).do(a) with super(cls, cls).do(a) is not a good way. It will not work (it actually will cause an exception) when you have another class SubSubBase(SubBase) without load() method defined and you will try to use it.Wilks
@MartinGrůber: so what is the correct way in Python3? Simply super().load(...) will work correctly for classmethods?Doehne
@Doehne Not sure what is the correct way but I would stay with super(Derived, cls).do(a) which works AFAIK.Wilks
S
-4

This works for me:

Base.do('hi')
Stratiform answered 12/8, 2009 at 23:12 Comment(2)
The cls argument will then be bound to Base instead of DerivedBortz
what works for me is this - which looks (a lot) like Ned's answer: where self derives from QGraphicsView which has paintEvent(QPaintEvent) def paintEvent (self, qpntEvent): print dir(self) QGraphicsView.paintEvent(self, qpntEvent)Laden

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