5 Useful Dunder Methods In Python

Today we will be learning about 5 useful dunder methods that we can use in Python.
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00:00 Learning Python made simple
00:05 Intro
00:14 _eq_
03:49 _format_
05:42 _or_
08:41 _repr_
11:24 _getitem_
15:51 What are your thoughts?

Пікірлер: 125

  • @xinaesthetic
    @xinaesthetic2 ай бұрын

    One minor point: to make the search case-insensitive, you should really lower the input as well.

  • @Indently

    @Indently

    2 ай бұрын

    Fair point!

  • @xinaesthetic

    @xinaesthetic

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Indently great post, though, thanks.

  • @asmaamagedy9872

    @asmaamagedy9872

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@Indently Thanks for every thing❤

  • @GitaAska-is6yz

    @GitaAska-is6yz

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Indently please tutorial full all method

  • @quillaja

    @quillaja

    Ай бұрын

    Or better yet, casefold to deal with some non-ascii characters. Possibly unicode normalization as well for stuff like combining characters. Text is hard.

  • @Bwanshoom
    @Bwanshoom2 ай бұрын

    F-strings can also show the repr of an object using the !r specifier: f"{item!r}"

  • @davidmurphy563

    @davidmurphy563

    2 ай бұрын

    G-strings can show a lot too.

  • @marmiksharma2573

    @marmiksharma2573

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@davidmurphy563 wtheckk😂

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    Since which version? And is it pronounced bang r? Does anyone remember back quotes being assign to repr?

  • @nibblrrr7124

    @nibblrrr7124

    2 ай бұрын

    @@DrDeuteron f-strings (or "formatted string literals") were added in *Python 3.6* , released end of 2016. The type converter !r to call repr() was there from the start, as proposed in PEP498 - along with !a for ascii(), and the rarely useful !s for str(). I have never thought about its pronounciation before, but I'm definitely going to use "banger" from now on. :D

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    @@nibblrrr7124 don't forget unicode() from 2x, but those backward quotes `foo` -> repr(foo) were weird. Though emacs knew about them,

  • @poixd1ro
    @poixd1ro2 ай бұрын

    Your content is one of the best, I would never have imagined that __str__ was different than __repr__

  • @DrDeuteron
    @DrDeuteron2 ай бұрын

    one common pythonic thing is, repr(instance) should return a string so that: >>>instance == eval(repr(instance)) is True, so something _like_: return f"{type(self).___name__}(}" + ", ".join(f'{k}={v}' for k, v in self.___dict___.items()) + ")" Also: note that these dunder methods are _strongly typed_ and MUST return a str. You can also use the "dunder module" static class attribute to assist.

  • @rodrigodanielvittoriali6629
    @rodrigodanielvittoriali6629Ай бұрын

    Man! I had no idea Python could do all of this. So glad the algo picked this. Thanks for the info!

  • @developer_anonymous
    @developer_anonymous2 ай бұрын

    Good video, but Pyright suggest you to use `self.__class__` when instating the same class instead of using `ClassName(...)`. So in the `__or__` method you should instead return `self.__class__(...)`, and basically in every method that returns a new instance of Self. Hope it helps!

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    Doesn’t type(self) work too?

  • @SusanAmberBruce
    @SusanAmberBruce2 ай бұрын

    Two and a half kilo Apple! I did dream about such a thing when I was a kid, familiar with scrumping.

  • @DownThereForDancing
    @DownThereForDancing2 ай бұрын

    Wow I have been sitting on a use-case for union, intersection and subtraction methods for the past year but never knew the syntax could be so nice with these dunder methods (__or__ and friends). Thank you!

  • @pavfrang
    @pavfrang2 ай бұрын

    Thank you, very intuitive and precise presentation!

  • @jccorman5848
    @jccorman58482 ай бұрын

    1500g! What a big banana you have 😂

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse2 ай бұрын

    Personally, I would require that the name representation was always lowercase anyway, even on initialization. As for fun with operators, I like to overload / on strings in languages that don't already do so to act as the split operation. Say you've got a string that's s = "foo,bar,baz,luhrmann"; then a = s / ','; would yield an array of strings containing ["foo", "bar", "baz", "luhrmann"].

  • @landsgevaer

    @landsgevaer

    Ай бұрын

    Nice complement of multiplying strings! I might borrow that idea.

  • @rodelias9378
    @rodelias937823 күн бұрын

    Awesome video! Your explanation is really good! Thanks a lot!

  • @workingguy3166
    @workingguy3166Ай бұрын

    Man this is crazy helpful, this is some advanced stuff

  • @user-co9rc1kp7p
    @user-co9rc1kp7p2 ай бұрын

    Another cool video, thanks! Hope to see more ___dunders__ :)

  • @dbottesi
    @dbottesi2 ай бұрын

    another great video thumbs up!!

  • @rishiraj2548
    @rishiraj25482 ай бұрын

    Great thanks

  • @jesusromero9167
    @jesusromero91672 ай бұрын

    Great video!

  • @SciChronicleUniverse
    @SciChronicleUniverseАй бұрын

    really knowledgeful

  • @dipeshsamrawat7957
    @dipeshsamrawat79572 ай бұрын

    Nice. Keep it up. 💯

  • @Mefodii
    @Mefodii2 ай бұрын

    Great video, thanks One extra thing which I learned was that you can do filter with list comprehension. Until now I did filter + lambda (which basically was shooting myself in the leg because of whacky annotations).Thanks again

  • @aliakbarsobhanpour8470
    @aliakbarsobhanpour84702 ай бұрын

    that was awesome.

  • @shaxzodbek16
    @shaxzodbek162 ай бұрын

    you do it so useful for all of us. I know what you are one of the best python developer.

  • @stefanocardarelli9201
    @stefanocardarelli92012 ай бұрын

    Thanks alot for the quality content you provide! One question: what is the extension that shows you classes and methods usages throughout code? When coding rust that thing is auto enabled (thanks to the compiler features I guess)… thanks in advance :)

  • @davidl3383
    @davidl3383Ай бұрын

    thanks a lot

  • @Anomaa
    @Anomaa2 ай бұрын

    I'm not a fan of most dunder methods (specifically for operators) most of the time since they drastically reduce understanding of the code. For example at 7:33, to try to guess in advance what will be displayed, we must: - know that the syntax "|" is related to the dunder method "__or__" - read the documentation/source code A function/method/classmethod anything else actually with an explicit name (like "combine") and a good docstring would be so much more readable

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    For me, I love overloading operators, until I want to see where something happens in the code.

  • @Raugturi

    @Raugturi

    2 ай бұрын

    Also it's weird to have "__or__" method that's not commutative. I would not expect `a | b == b | a` to return False and here it will. Edit: Fixed based on @mudi2000a comment.

  • @thomaseb97

    @thomaseb97

    2 ай бұрын

    certain functionality is fine for dunder methods, basically where they are self explainatory, __str__ is a simple expectation, __eq__ aswell an example where __add__ and other mathmatical operators is fine to overload is for example a Point class which just represents multiple numbers basically use dunder methods where its extremely clear what it does under the hood by just knowing what the class represents without looking at the actual implementation

  • @nibblrrr7124

    @nibblrrr7124

    2 ай бұрын

    I disagree with your first point (that it's not obvious that the "|" operator calls "__or__"), as that is just being familiar with Python. That ship has sailed with "__init__", hasn't it? (The fact that we have come to accept how messed-up and confusing constructor syntax in C++/Java is another topic...) However, I do agree that unless the meaning is obvious - like the interfaces from collections.abc, or behaving similarly to builtin datatypes ("+" for concatenation, like with str or list) - or well-documented and signposted, you're probably better off using regular methods and make the users write more explicit calls.

  • @mudi2000a

    @mudi2000a

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Raugturi You mean commutative.

  • @kristerl939
    @kristerl9392 ай бұрын

    Like this and I agree with @xinaesthetic about the input should be also be converted. But you should use 'casefold()' instead of 'lower()', in these examples it might not matter but it should always be used when a comparison is made. Keep up with the videos.

  • @VoxelPrismatic
    @VoxelPrismatic2 ай бұрын

    I'm just thankful I finally know what these methods are called. Every few months or so, I come up with an idea with classes, and I need to scour the internet 15min for the python documentation on all these methods.

  • @felo7343

    @felo7343

    2 ай бұрын

    If you thought that was tough, imagine trying to do the same thing 15 to 20 years ago....

  • @TheWyrdSmythe
    @TheWyrdSmythe2 ай бұрын

    From my Java days, one rule I’ve always followed is: “Always define toString!” In Python, it’s: “Always define dunder str and repr!” It should be one of the first things you do when you write a class. (FWIW, I typically use dunder repr to return a JSON-like string, but that’s just me.)

  • @nibblrrr7124

    @nibblrrr7124

    2 ай бұрын

    One rule of thumb I try to follow: eval(repr(my_object)) == my_object So repr() should give the code to construct the same (or at least an equivalent) object. This is what e.g. dataclass or namedtuple do by default. Use dunder attributes for the class name, to avoid mistakes when renaming classes or copying code: def __repr__(self): return f"{__class__.__qualname__}(x={self.x!r}, ...)" If this one-liner gets too cluttered, put the class name in a helper variable cls and use ', '.join() or linebreak-separated strings within parentheses for the constructor args/attributes. Now that I think of it, this _could_ probably be automated into a class wrapper using introspection to get the constructor signature... I guess you could use name instead of qualname, b/c AFAIU it only makes a difference with nested classes, which IMHO should make anyone pause and question their choices, anyway. :^)

  • @TheWyrdSmythe

    @TheWyrdSmythe

    2 ай бұрын

    @@nibblrrr7124 Yeah, that's nice! The JSON string I usually emit is something like: {classname:{attributes and values}} Which does allow reconstruction of the object from the JSON and is fairly readable when debugging.

  • @mudi2000a

    @mudi2000a

    2 ай бұрын

    If you use it for debugging only, __repr__ is enough, it will be automatically called also instead of __str__ if __str__ does not exist.

  • @mikerico6175
    @mikerico6175Ай бұрын

    The __repr line 11, you can just do return f ‘{value =}’ instead of f ‘value = {value }’ . Also, for the __get_item lines 28 29

  • @chandrasekars8904
    @chandrasekars8904Ай бұрын

    This is really an excellent channel on Python like "techie talkee"

  • @ladislavhusty9466
    @ladislavhusty946620 күн бұрын

    You could also define the dunder method __iter__ for class Basket to make it iterable as well

  • @krzysiekkrzysiek9059
    @krzysiekkrzysiek90592 ай бұрын

    If I do order with subscriptions, this channel stays. Great kind of practical tutorial 🔥

  • @felicytatomaszewska2934
    @felicytatomaszewska29342 ай бұрын

    Very nice … can you please do videos on testing

  • @Edurolp
    @Edurolp2 ай бұрын

    Great video :D btw you have some big bananas in there!

  • @williamsquires3070
    @williamsquires30702 ай бұрын

    (@3:30) This raises several questions: 1) wouldn’t this implementation of the __eq__ dunder method make it compare the addresses of the two dictionaries? 2) can you change the value of the instance’s values through the dictionary, with the __dict__ dunder method? That is, if you change the value associated with the key, ‘grams’, will it change the instance’s ‘grams’ property to that new value, or only the dictionary?

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    What’s great about python is that you can test it in an interpreter about as fast as you can answer the question.

  • @nibblrrr7124

    @nibblrrr7124

    2 ай бұрын

    1) No, because == on the default collections (dict, list, set, ...) compares their contents by value. Use the *is* operator for checking for identity, i.e. whether they're literally referring to the same object in memory. 2) Yes, at least for normal user-defined classes (AFAIU classes can use slots instead of a class dict; also @property attributes might be an issue). Please don't, as it's hella confusing. But as Raymond Hettinger puts it: "Python is a language for consenting adults." (See also: Why are there no private methods?)

  • @artygor2524
    @artygor2524Ай бұрын

    Nice tutorial, except for the part where you did basket: Basket = (fruit = fruit), that was the equivalent of calling a string just "string" and it really confused me

  • @BersekViking
    @BersekViking2 ай бұрын

    That was one big banana. :)

  • @Alchemist10241
    @Alchemist102412 ай бұрын

    Didn't know we can specify the return type in Python, thanks

  • @sarimbinwaseem

    @sarimbinwaseem

    2 ай бұрын

    And you can return a different type regardless of the specification... 😄

  • @Alchemist10241

    @Alchemist10241

    2 ай бұрын

    @@sarimbinwaseem hmmm interesting

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    Every thing is a first class object in python

  • @AtselWarawara
    @AtselWarawara2 ай бұрын

    I'm new to python, is there any version requirements or restrictions to use these Dunder methods?

  • @landsgevaer

    @landsgevaer

    Ай бұрын

    Don't think so (post python2 i presume?)

  • @AtselWarawara

    @AtselWarawara

    Ай бұрын

    @@landsgevaer yes, I use 3.10 however I need compatibility to 3.7 and 3.8

  • @pro.elisei
    @pro.eliseiАй бұрын

    (1) It gives me an error when I annotate 'other' with 'Fruit' or 'Self' at or and repr Dunder Methods (e.g. def __or__(self, other: Fruit) -> Fruit:)... it says „NameError: name 'Fruit' is not defined”. It works only with 'object' (def __or__(self, other: object) -> object:). And if I write 'object', PyCharm warns me at 'combined: Fruit = apple | orange | banana' -> expected object type Fruit :)) Any thoughts? Thanks! and (2) If you want to use __format__ and __str__ / __repr__ at the same time, it won't work. It raises the error from __fomat__ match _: ValueError: Unknown format specifier... You will have to specify the desc match to work - print(f'str: {fruit:desc}') P.S. I found your videos recently and it's a pleasure watching them. Keep it up! ❤

  • @landsgevaer

    @landsgevaer

    Ай бұрын

    Without checking: from __future__ import annotations and/or from typing import Self

  • @zoookx
    @zoookx2 ай бұрын

    9:11 my grandmother is a developer. She can read both.

  • @rondamon4408
    @rondamon44082 ай бұрын

    What's your microphone brand/model? It sounds amazing!

  • @Indently

    @Indently

    2 ай бұрын

    It's the Røde NT USB

  • @rondamon4408

    @rondamon4408

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Indently merci

  • @TomLeg
    @TomLeg2 ай бұрын

    It's important to prioritize your fruits 🙂

  • @matthewbay1978

    @matthewbay1978

    2 ай бұрын

    I just imagine an Easter egg in all of their code where if you add 'banana' to the end of an input, it will show an ASCII art banana for 5 seconds before moving on to the actual functionality of the code.

  • @PerfectArmonic
    @PerfectArmonic2 ай бұрын

    Where can i Find a comprehensive list of all python dunder methods?

  • @MeHdi.fz28

    @MeHdi.fz28

    2 ай бұрын

    Python document webpage

  • @landsgevaer

    @landsgevaer

    Ай бұрын

    Google "list of all dunder methods in python" disappointed you?

  • @exkalybur_dev
    @exkalybur_dev2 ай бұрын

    I'm learning English. I'd like to know where are you or where come from your accent. Please. Thanks a lot.

  • @landsgevaer

    @landsgevaer

    Ай бұрын

    Sounds German(ic).

  • @vanka_feelgood3000
    @vanka_feelgood30002 ай бұрын

    I think Self in the __eq__ is not correct. In general, we can compare with any object, just need to return False if the other object is not the instance of the class

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    Luckily type hints don’t matter

  • @loo_9

    @loo_9

    2 ай бұрын

    begone javascript sympathizer. although python does not enforce it, you should not be using the == operator on objects of different types. if you want to compare objects and but are not sure the type, your problems are much deeper

  • @Rusvi1
    @Rusvi128 күн бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @thousandsunny100
    @thousandsunny1002 ай бұрын

    I get this error on the first example, "NameError: name 'Self' is not defined".

  • @johnraz99

    @johnraz99

    Ай бұрын

    Did you include the first line: from typing import Self Because I'm using Python 3.10, I had to include: from typing_extensions import Self

  • @thousandsunny100

    @thousandsunny100

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnraz99 totally missed it. Thanks!

  • @AsherGene-uw6hk
    @AsherGene-uw6hk2 ай бұрын

    Second

  • @AAI_Einstein
    @AAI_Einstein2 ай бұрын

    4:30 when were these keywords added?😂

  • @kyrgyzsanjar
    @kyrgyzsanjar2 ай бұрын

    What is the name of that assigment style with colon? apple: Fruit = Fruit(name="", grams=) What's different vs. apple = Fruit(....)?

  • @anon_y_mousse

    @anon_y_mousse

    2 ай бұрын

    It's a type annotation. I was just playing around with the interpreter and it doesn't prevent me from assigning other types to a variable, so I'm not really sure what the point is other than to provide documentation for anyone reading the source code, but if you just call a constructor like that it's redundant for seemingly no reason. Maybe someone more knowledgeable about Python can correct us both, but for what it's worth, I wouldn't bother unless the declaration is separate from your first initialization of a variable.

  • @kyrgyzsanjar

    @kyrgyzsanjar

    Ай бұрын

    @@anon_y_mousse oh got it! Yeah makes sense!

  • @cookie_space

    @cookie_space

    18 күн бұрын

    It doesn't prevent you of assigning anything else but it will show you a warning for it. Also it enables your IDE to include the appropriate methods that are associated with that type in the auto-complete list.

  • @anon_y_mousse

    @anon_y_mousse

    17 күн бұрын

    @@cookie_space I don't use an IDE. It's either vim or the python3 interpreter from the command line whenever I use it. The only time I've discovered that it actually errs is when used for parameter typing for functions, but I guess warnings will have to suffice for other uses. It would be nice if Python would use it to prevent assignment of unequal types, but in a language that treats variables as *really* variable, that's probably asking too much.

  • @DebashishGhoshOfficial
    @DebashishGhoshOfficial2 ай бұрын

    What if I do apple | apple ?

  • @landsgevaer

    @landsgevaer

    Ай бұрын

    Fruit(name="apple & apple", grams=2000.0) the way he implemented it (I don't remember the weight).

  • @diogolscc
    @diogolscc2 ай бұрын

    first

  • @user-bc1xp2of2x
    @user-bc1xp2of2x2 ай бұрын

    I love you infinite percent

  • @TheWyrdSmythe
    @TheWyrdSmythe2 ай бұрын

    Oof, da! I would _never_ redefine get _item_ to return a list. For that, add another method with a better name. And you need to .lower() the item, too!

  • @MyrLin8
    @MyrLin82 ай бұрын

    Is there a 'head' method? ;)

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    No, but there is a mifflin

  • @landsgevaer

    @landsgevaer

    Ай бұрын

    Pandas dataframes have a head method; not dunder though...

  • @willyyeremi5284
    @willyyeremi5284Ай бұрын

    when i reach the __getitem__ section, i only think "fruit for fruit inside fruit, idk man, can i just eat all of it???"

  • @jeviwaugh9791
    @jeviwaugh97912 ай бұрын

    third

  • @iestyn129
    @iestyn1292 ай бұрын

    Did you mean to use ‘fruit.name.lower() == item.lower()’? I’m just checking because it sounded like you meant to do that lol

  • @Indently

    @Indently

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes, as someone else pointed, I only did half the job there xD

  • @AsgerJon
    @AsgerJon29 күн бұрын

    __prepare__

  • @iestyn129
    @iestyn1292 ай бұрын

    🐟

  • @mikerico6175
    @mikerico6175Ай бұрын

    f ‘{value =}’

  • @vaulttectradingco8438
    @vaulttectradingco84382 ай бұрын

    Discord gang

  • @WiktorWandachowicz
    @WiktorWandachowicz2 ай бұрын

    😅With regard to *__eq__* "double underscore" method (hence the name "dunder") you really should mention that it compares two OBJECTS here, not CLASSES... For obvious reasons objects are instances of classes, not "aliases" like you have said in the first part 😉 That said, this material is still worthwhile. But my university ears just hurt when such mistakes are done. Best regards and thanks!

  • @DrDeuteron
    @DrDeuteron2 ай бұрын

    its dunder getitem, not get_item.

  • @Indently

    @Indently

    2 ай бұрын

    Thank you, I have updated both the thumbnail and description!

  • @i7Solutions
    @i7SolutionsАй бұрын

    your way of writing variables with type hinting really confused me

  • @NINROD_
    @NINROD_Ай бұрын

    I do not recomend any python user see this video. Several things of python 1 (still are teached and mixed with Cobol or other grosser language anyway…

  • @user-bd1dh7hh1j
    @user-bd1dh7hh1j2 ай бұрын

    Man, those tooltips are extremely annoying. They distract me a lot from reading the code as you type it.

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    Do you mean the annotations? Like: Twopi : float = three: int + 0.1 : float + 41: int / pow(10: int, 3: int) ? Yes. And telling ppl dunder init returns None, I just can’t. Of dunder str returns str. Same for int, float, complex, etc….

  • @user-bd1dh7hh1j

    @user-bd1dh7hh1j

    2 ай бұрын

    @@DrDeuteron No. I just meant the IDE tooltips

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-bd1dh7hh1j oh. Yes, I turn those off all the time, esp when I'm writing a line that depends the prior line... ...it opens up and hides what I want to build off of and tells me a bunch of stuff I don't need to know.