API Reference for the attr Namespace¶
Note
These are the traditional APIs whose creation predates type annotations.
They are not deprecated, but we suggest using the attrs namespace for new code, because they look nicer and have better defaults.
See also On The Core API Names.
Core¶
- attr.s(these=None, repr_ns=None, repr=None, cmp=None, hash=None, init=None, slots=False, frozen=False, weakref_slot=True, str=False, auto_attribs=False, kw_only=False, cache_hash=False, auto_exc=False, eq=None, order=None, auto_detect=False, collect_by_mro=False, getstate_setstate=None, on_setattr=None, field_transformer=None, match_args=True, unsafe_hash=None)¶
A class decorator that adds dunder methods according to the specified attributes using
attr.ibor the these argument.Consider using
attrs.define/attrs.frozenin new code (attr.swill never go away, though).- Parameters:
repr_ns (str) – When using nested classes, there was no way in Python 2 to automatically detect that. This argument allows to set a custom name for a more meaningful
reproutput. This argument is pointless in Python 3 and is therefore deprecated.
Caution
Refer to
attrs.definefor the rest of the parameters, but note that they can have different defaults.Notably, leaving on_setattr as
Nonewill not add any hooks.Added in version 16.0.0: slots
Added in version 16.1.0: frozen
Added in version 16.3.0: str
Added in version 16.3.0: Support for
__attrs_post_init__.Changed in version 17.1.0: hash supports
Noneas value which is also the default now.Added in version 17.3.0: auto_attribs
Changed in version 18.1.0: If these is passed, no attributes are deleted from the class body.
Changed in version 18.1.0: If these is ordered, the order is retained.
Added in version 18.2.0: weakref_slot
Deprecated since version 18.2.0:
__lt__,__le__,__gt__, and__ge__now raise aDeprecationWarningif the classes compared are subclasses of each other.__eqand__ne__never tried to compared subclasses to each other.Changed in version 19.2.0:
__lt__,__le__,__gt__, and__ge__now do not consider subclasses comparable anymore.Added in version 18.2.0: kw_only
Added in version 18.2.0: cache_hash
Added in version 19.1.0: auto_exc
Deprecated since version 19.2.0: cmp Removal on or after 2021-06-01.
Added in version 19.2.0: eq and order
Added in version 20.1.0: auto_detect
Added in version 20.1.0: collect_by_mro
Added in version 20.1.0: getstate_setstate
Added in version 20.1.0: on_setattr
Added in version 20.3.0: field_transformer
Changed in version 21.1.0:
init=Falseinjects__attrs_init__Changed in version 21.1.0: Support for
__attrs_pre_init__Changed in version 21.1.0: cmp undeprecated
Added in version 21.3.0: match_args
Added in version 22.2.0: unsafe_hash as an alias for hash (for PEP 681 compliance).
Deprecated since version 24.1.0: repr_ns
Changed in version 24.1.0: Instances are not compared as tuples of attributes anymore, but using a big
andcondition. This is faster and has more correct behavior for uncomparable values likemath.nan.Added in version 24.1.0: If a class has an inherited classmethod called
__attrs_init_subclass__, it is executed after the class is created.Deprecated since version 24.1.0: hash is deprecated in favor of unsafe_hash.
For example:
>>> import attr >>> @attr.s ... class C: ... _private = attr.ib() >>> C(private=42) C(_private=42) >>> class D: ... def __init__(self, x): ... self.x = x >>> D(1) <D object at ...> >>> D = attr.s(these={"x": attr.ib()}, init=False)(D) >>> D(1) D(x=1) >>> @attr.s(auto_exc=True) ... class Error(Exception): ... x = attr.ib() ... y = attr.ib(default=42, init=False) >>> Error("foo") Error(x='foo', y=42) >>> raise Error("foo") Traceback (most recent call last): ... Error: ('foo', 42) >>> raise ValueError("foo", 42) # for comparison Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: ('foo', 42)
- attr.ib(default=NOTHING, validator=None, repr=True, cmp=None, hash=None, init=True, metadata=None, type=None, converter=None, factory=None, kw_only=False, eq=None, order=None, on_setattr=None, alias=None)¶
Create a new field / attribute on a class.
Identical to
attrs.field, except it’s not keyword-only.Consider using
attrs.fieldin new code (attr.ibwill never go away, though).Warning
Does nothing unless the class is also decorated with
attr.s(or similar)!Added in version 15.2.0: convert
Added in version 16.3.0: metadata
Changed in version 17.1.0: validator can be a
listnow.Changed in version 17.1.0: hash is
Noneand therefore mirrors eq by default.Added in version 17.3.0: type
Deprecated since version 17.4.0: convert
Added in version 17.4.0: converter as a replacement for the deprecated convert to achieve consistency with other noun-based arguments.
Added in version 18.1.0:
factory=fis syntactic sugar fordefault=attr.Factory(f).Added in version 18.2.0: kw_only
Changed in version 19.2.0: convert keyword argument removed.
Changed in version 19.2.0: repr also accepts a custom callable.
Deprecated since version 19.2.0: cmp Removal on or after 2021-06-01.
Added in version 19.2.0: eq and order
Added in version 20.1.0: on_setattr
Changed in version 20.3.0: kw_only backported to Python 2
Changed in version 21.1.0: eq, order, and cmp also accept a custom callable
Changed in version 21.1.0: cmp undeprecated
Added in version 22.2.0: alias
Note
attrs also comes with a serious-business alias
attr.attrib.The object returned by
attr.ibalso allows for setting the default and the validator using decorators:>>> @attr.s ... class C: ... x = attr.ib() ... y = attr.ib() ... @x.validator ... def _any_name_except_a_name_of_an_attribute(self, attribute, value): ... if value < 0: ... raise ValueError("x must be positive") ... @y.default ... def _any_name_except_a_name_of_an_attribute(self): ... return self.x + 1 >>> C(1) C(x=1, y=2) >>> C(-1) Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: x must be positive
- attr.define()¶
Same as
attrs.define.
- attr.mutable()¶
Same as
attrs.mutable.
- attr.frozen()¶
Same as
attrs.frozen.
- attr.field()¶
Same as
attrs.field.
- class attr.Attribute¶
Same as
attrs.Attribute.
- attr.make_class()¶
Same as
attrs.make_class.
- class attr.Factory(factory, takes_self=False)
Stores a factory callable.
If passed as the default value to
attrs.field, the factory is used to generate a new value.- Parameters:
Added in version 17.1.0: takes_self
Same as
attrs.Factory.
- attr.NOTHING¶
Same as
attrs.NOTHING.
Exceptions¶
All exceptions are available from both attr.exceptions and attrs.exceptions (it’s the same module in a different namespace).
Please refer to attrs.exceptions for details.
Helpers¶
- attr.cmp_using()¶
Same as
attrs.cmp_using.
- attr.fields()¶
Same as
attrs.fields.
- attr.fields_dict()¶
Same as
attrs.fields_dict.
- attr.resolve_types()¶
Same as
attrs.resolve_types.
- attr.asdict(inst, recurse=True, filter=None, dict_factory=<class 'dict'>, retain_collection_types=False, value_serializer=None)¶
Return the attrs attribute values of inst as a dict.
Optionally recurse into other attrs-decorated classes.
- Parameters:
inst – Instance of an attrs-decorated class.
recurse (bool) – Recurse into classes that are also attrs-decorated.
filter (Callable) – A callable whose return code determines whether an attribute or element is included (
True) or dropped (False). Is called with theattrs.Attributeas the first argument and the value as the second argument.dict_factory (Callable) – A callable to produce dictionaries from. For example, to produce ordered dictionaries instead of normal Python dictionaries, pass in
collections.OrderedDict.retain_collection_types (bool) – Do not convert to
listwhen encountering an attribute whose type istupleorset. Only meaningful if recurse isTrue.value_serializer (Callable | None) – A hook that is called for every attribute or dict key/value. It receives the current instance, field and value and must return the (updated) value. The hook is run after the optional filter has been applied.
- Returns:
Return type of dict_factory.
- Raises:
attrs.exceptions.NotAnAttrsClassError – If cls is not an attrs class.
Added in version 16.0.0: dict_factory
Added in version 16.1.0: retain_collection_types
Added in version 20.3.0: value_serializer
Added in version 21.3.0: If a dict has a collection for a key, it is serialized as a tuple.
- attr.astuple(inst, recurse=True, filter=None, tuple_factory=<class 'tuple'>, retain_collection_types=False)¶
Return the attrs attribute values of inst as a tuple.
Optionally recurse into other attrs-decorated classes.
- Parameters:
inst – Instance of an attrs-decorated class.
recurse (bool) – Recurse into classes that are also attrs-decorated.
filter (Callable) – A callable whose return code determines whether an attribute or element is included (
True) or dropped (False). Is called with theattrs.Attributeas the first argument and the value as the second argument.tuple_factory (Callable) – A callable to produce tuples from. For example, to produce lists instead of tuples.
retain_collection_types (bool) – Do not convert to
listordictwhen encountering an attribute which type istuple,dictorset. Only meaningful if recurse isTrue.
- Returns:
Return type of tuple_factory
- Raises:
attrs.exceptions.NotAnAttrsClassError – If cls is not an attrs class.
Added in version 16.2.0.
- attr.filters.include()¶
Same as
attrs.filters.include.
- attr.filters.exclude()¶
Same as
attrs.filters.exclude.
See attrs.asdict() for examples.
All objects from attrs.filters are also available in attr.filters.
- attr.evolve()¶
Same as
attrs.evolve.
- attr.validate()¶
Same as
attrs.validate.
Validators¶
All objects from attrs.validators are also available in attr.validators.
Please refer to the former for details.
Converters¶
All objects from attrs.converters are also available from attr.converters.
Please refer to the former for details.
Setters¶
All objects from attrs.setters are also available in attr.setters.
Please refer to the former for details.
Deprecated APIs¶
To help you write backward compatible code that doesn’t throw warnings on modern releases, the attr module has an __version_info__ attribute as of version 19.2.0.
It behaves similarly to sys.version_info and is an instance of attr.VersionInfo:
- class attr.VersionInfo(year: int, minor: int, micro: int, releaselevel: str)¶
A version object that can be compared to tuple of length 1–4:
>>> attr.VersionInfo(19, 1, 0, "final") <= (19, 2) True >>> attr.VersionInfo(19, 1, 0, "final") < (19, 1, 1) True >>> vi = attr.VersionInfo(19, 2, 0, "final") >>> vi < (19, 1, 1) False >>> vi < (19,) False >>> vi == (19, 2,) True >>> vi == (19, 2, 1) False
Added in version 19.2.
With its help you can write code like this:
>>> if getattr(attr, "__version_info__", (0,)) >= (19, 2): ... cmp_off = {"eq": False} ... else: ... cmp_off = {"cmp": False} >>> cmp_off == {"eq": False} True >>> @attr.s(**cmp_off) ... class C: ... pass
- attr.assoc(inst, **changes)¶
Copy inst and apply changes.
This is different from
evolvethat applies the changes to the arguments that create the new instance.evolve’s behavior is preferable, but there are edge cases where it doesn’t work. Thereforeassocis deprecated, but will not be removed.- Parameters:
inst – Instance of a class with attrs attributes.
changes – Keyword changes in the new copy.
- Returns:
A copy of inst with changes incorporated.
- Raises:
attrs.exceptions.AttrsAttributeNotFoundError – If attr_name couldn’t be found on cls.
attrs.exceptions.NotAnAttrsClassError – If cls is not an attrs class.
Deprecated since version 17.1.0: Use
attrs.evolveinstead if you can. This function will not be removed du to the slightly different approach compared toattrs.evolve, though.
Before attrs got attrs.validators.set_disabled and attrs.validators.set_disabled, it had the following APIs to globally enable and disable validators.
They won’t be removed, but are discouraged to use:
- attr.set_run_validators(run)¶
Set whether or not validators are run. By default, they are run.
Deprecated since version 21.3.0: It will not be removed, but it also will not be moved to new
attrsnamespace. Useattrs.validators.set_disabled()instead.
- attr.get_run_validators()¶
Return whether or not validators are run.
Deprecated since version 21.3.0: It will not be removed, but it also will not be moved to new
attrsnamespace. Useattrs.validators.get_disabled()instead.
The serious-business aliases used to be called attr.attributes and attr.attr.
There are no plans to remove them but they shouldn’t be used in new code.