enum
— Support for enumerations¶
New in version 3.4.
Source code: Lib/enum.py
An enumeration:
is a set of symbolic names (members) bound to unique values
can be iterated over to return its canonical (i.e. non-alias) members in definition order
uses call syntax to return members by value
uses index syntax to return members by name
Enumerations are created either by using class
syntax, or by
using function-call syntax:
>>> from enum import Enum
>>> # class syntax
>>> class Color(Enum):
... RED = 1
... GREEN = 2
... BLUE = 3
>>> # functional syntax
>>> Color = Enum('Color', ['RED', 'GREEN', 'BLUE'])
Even though we can use class
syntax to create Enums, Enums
are not normal Python classes. See
How are Enums different? for more details.
Note
Nomenclature
The class
Color
is an enumeration (or enum)The attributes
Color.RED
,Color.GREEN
, etc., are enumeration members (or members) and are functionally constants.The enum members have names and values (the name of
Color.RED
isRED
, the value ofColor.BLUE
is3
, etc.)
Module Contents¶
The
type
for Enum and its subclasses.Base class for creating enumerated constants.
Base class for creating enumerated constants that can be combined using the bitwise operations without losing their
Flag
membership.An enumeration with the values
CONTINUOUS
,NAMED_FLAGS
, andUNIQUE
, for use withverify()
to ensure various constraints are met by a given enumeration.An enumeration with the values
STRICT
,CONFORM
,EJECT
, andKEEP
which allows for more fine-grained control over how invalid values are dealt with in an enumeration.Instances are replaced with an appropriate value for Enum members.
StrEnum
defaults to the lower-cased version of the member name, while other Enums default to 1 and increase from there.Allows
Enum
members to have attributes without conflicting with member names.Enum class decorator that ensures only one name is bound to any one value.
Enum class decorator that checks user-selectable constraints on an enumeration.
Make
obj
a member. Can be used as a decorator.Do not make
obj
a member. Can be used as a decorator.Return a list of all power-of-two integers contained in a flag.
New in version 3.6: Flag
, IntFlag
, auto
New in version 3.11: StrEnum
, EnumCheck
, ReprEnum
, FlagBoundary
, property
, member
, nonmember
, global_enum
, show_flag_values
Data Types¶
- class enum.EnumType¶
EnumType is the metaclass for enum enumerations. It is possible to subclass EnumType – see Subclassing EnumType for details.
EnumType is responsible for setting the correct
__repr__()
,__str__()
,__format__()
, and__reduce__()
methods on the final enum, as well as creating the enum members, properly handling duplicates, providing iteration over the enum class, etc.- __contains__(cls, member)¶
Returns
True
if member belongs to thecls
:>>> some_var = Color.RED >>> some_var in Color True
Note
In Python 3.12 it will be possible to check for member values and not just members; until then, a
TypeError
will be raised if a non-Enum-member is used in a containment check.
- __dir__(cls)¶
Returns
['__class__', '__doc__', '__members__', '__module__']
and the names of the members in cls:>>> dir(Color) ['BLUE', 'GREEN', 'RED', '__class__', '__contains__', '__doc__', '__getitem__', '__init_subclass__', '__iter__', '__len__', '__members__', '__module__', '__name__', '__qualname__']
- __getattr__(cls, name)¶
Returns the Enum member in cls matching name, or raises an
AttributeError
:>>> Color.GREEN <Color.GREEN: 2>
- __getitem__(cls, name)¶
Returns the Enum member in cls matching name, or raises a
KeyError
:>>> Color['BLUE'] <Color.BLUE: 3>
- __iter__(cls)¶
Returns each member in cls in definition order:
>>> list(Color) [<Color.RED: 1>, <Color.GREEN: 2>, <Color.BLUE: 3>]
- __len__(cls)¶
Returns the number of member in cls:
>>> len(Color) 3
- __reversed__(cls)¶
Returns each member in cls in reverse definition order:
>>> list(reversed(Color)) [<Color.BLUE: 3>, <Color.GREEN: 2>, <Color.RED: 1>]
- class enum.Enum¶
Enum is the base class for all enum enumerations.
- name¶
The name used to define the
Enum
member:>>> Color.BLUE.name 'BLUE'
- value¶
The value given to the
Enum
member:>>> Color.RED.value 1
- _ignore_¶
_ignore_
is only used during creation and is removed from the enumeration once creation is complete._ignore_
is a list of names that will not become members, and whose names will also be removed from the completed enumeration. See TimePeriod for an example.
- __call__(cls, value, names=None, *, module=None, qualname=None, type=None, start=1, boundary=None)¶
This method is called in two different ways:
to look up an existing member:
- cls:
The enum class being called.
- value:
The value to lookup.
to use the
cls
enum to create a new enum:- cls:
The enum class being called.
- value:
The name of the new Enum to create.
- names:
The names/values of the members for the new Enum.
- module:
The name of the module the new Enum is created in.
- qualname:
The actual location in the module where this Enum can be found.
- type:
A mix-in type for the new Enum.
- start:
The first integer value for the Enum (used by
auto
).- boundary:
How to handle out-of-range values from bit operations (
Flag
only).
- __dir__(self)¶
Returns
['__class__', '__doc__', '__module__', 'name', 'value']
and any public methods defined on self.__class__:>>> from datetime import date >>> class Weekday(Enum): ... MONDAY = 1 ... TUESDAY = 2 ... WEDNESDAY = 3 ... THURSDAY = 4 ... FRIDAY = 5 ... SATURDAY = 6 ... SUNDAY = 7 ... @classmethod ... def today(cls): ... print('today is %s' % cls(date.today().isoweekday()).name) >>> dir(Weekday.SATURDAY) ['__class__', '__doc__', '__eq__', '__hash__', '__module__', 'name', 'today', 'value']
- _generate_next_value_(name, start, count, last_values)¶
- name:
The name of the member being defined (e.g. ‘RED’).
- start:
The start value for the Enum; the default is 1.
- count:
The number of members currently defined, not including this one.
- last_values:
A list of the previous values.
A staticmethod that is used to determine the next value returned by
auto
:>>> from enum import auto >>> class PowersOfThree(Enum): ... @staticmethod ... def _generate_next_value_(name, start, count, last_values): ... return 3 ** (count + 1) ... FIRST = auto() ... SECOND = auto() >>> PowersOfThree.SECOND.value 9
- __init_subclass__(cls, **kwds)¶
A classmethod that is used to further configure subsequent subclasses. By default, does nothing.
- _missing_(cls, value)¶
A classmethod for looking up values not found in cls. By default it does nothing, but can be overridden to implement custom search behavior:
>>> from enum import StrEnum >>> class Build(StrEnum): ... DEBUG = auto() ... OPTIMIZED = auto() ... @classmethod ... def _missing_(cls, value): ... value = value.lower() ... for member in cls: ... if member.value == value: ... return member ... return None >>> Build.DEBUG.value 'debug' >>> Build('deBUG') <Build.DEBUG: 'debug'>
- __repr__(self)¶
Returns the string used for repr() calls. By default, returns the Enum name, member name, and value, but can be overridden:
>>> class OtherStyle(Enum): ... ALTERNATE = auto() ... OTHER = auto() ... SOMETHING_ELSE = auto() ... def __repr__(self): ... cls_name = self.__class__.__name__ ... return f'{cls_name}.{self.name}' >>> OtherStyle.ALTERNATE, str(OtherStyle.ALTERNATE), f"{OtherStyle.ALTERNATE}" (OtherStyle.ALTERNATE, 'OtherStyle.ALTERNATE', 'OtherStyle.ALTERNATE')
- __str__(self)¶
Returns the string used for str() calls. By default, returns the Enum name and member name, but can be overridden:
>>> class OtherStyle(Enum): ... ALTERNATE = auto() ... OTHER = auto() ... SOMETHING_ELSE = auto() ... def __str__(self): ... return f'{self.name}' >>> OtherStyle.ALTERNATE, str(OtherStyle.ALTERNATE), f"{OtherStyle.ALTERNATE}" (<OtherStyle.ALTERNATE: 1>, 'ALTERNATE', 'ALTERNATE')
- __format__(self)¶
Returns the string used for format() and f-string calls. By default, returns
__str__()
return value, but can be overridden:>>> class OtherStyle(Enum): ... ALTERNATE = auto() ... OTHER = auto() ... SOMETHING_ELSE = auto() ... def __format__(self, spec): ... return f'{self.name}' >>> OtherStyle.ALTERNATE, str(OtherStyle.ALTERNATE), f"{OtherStyle.ALTERNATE}" (<OtherStyle.ALTERNATE: 1>, 'OtherStyle.ALTERNATE', 'ALTERNATE')
- class enum.IntEnum¶
IntEnum is the same as Enum, but its members are also integers and can be used anywhere that an integer can be used. If any integer operation is performed with an IntEnum member, the resulting value loses its enumeration status.
>>> from enum import IntEnum >>> class Numbers(IntEnum): ... ONE = 1 ... TWO = 2 ... THREE = 3 >>> Numbers.THREE <Numbers.THREE: 3> >>> Numbers.ONE + Numbers.TWO 3 >>> Numbers.THREE + 5 8 >>> Numbers.THREE == 3 True
Changed in version 3.11:
__str__()
is nowint.__str__()
to better support the replacement of existing constants use-case.__format__()
was alreadyint.__format__()
for that same reason.
- class enum.StrEnum¶
StrEnum is the same as Enum, but its members are also strings and can be used in most of the same places that a string can be used. The result of any string operation performed on or with a StrEnum member is not part of the enumeration.
Note
There are places in the stdlib that check for an exact
str
instead of astr
subclass (i.e.type(unknown) == str
instead ofisinstance(unknown, str)
), and in those locations you will need to usestr(StrEnum.member)
.Note
__str__()
isstr.__str__()
to better support the replacement of existing constants use-case.__format__()
is likewisestr.__format__()
for that same reason.New in version 3.11.
- class enum.Flag¶
Flag members support the bitwise operators
&
(AND),|
(OR),^
(XOR), and~
(INVERT); the results of those operators are members of the enumeration.- __contains__(self, value)¶
Returns True if value is in self:
>>> from enum import Flag, auto >>> class Color(Flag): ... RED = auto() ... GREEN = auto() ... BLUE = auto() >>> purple = Color.RED | Color.BLUE >>> white = Color.RED | Color.GREEN | Color.BLUE >>> Color.GREEN in purple False >>> Color.GREEN in white True >>> purple in white True >>> white in purple False
- __iter__(self):
Returns all contained non-alias members:
>>> list(Color.RED) [<Color.RED: 1>] >>> list(purple) [<Color.RED: 1>, <Color.BLUE: 4>]
Changed in version 3.11: Aliases are no longer returned during iteration.
- __len__(self):
Returns number of members in flag:
>>> len(Color.GREEN) 1 >>> len(white) 3
- __bool__(self):
Returns True if any members in flag, False otherwise:
>>> bool(Color.GREEN) True >>> bool(white) True >>> black = Color(0) >>> bool(black) False
- __or__(self, other)¶
Returns current flag binary or’ed with other:
>>> Color.RED | Color.GREEN <Color.RED|GREEN: 3>
- __and__(self, other)¶
Returns current flag binary and’ed with other:
>>> purple & white <Color.RED|BLUE: 5> >>> purple & Color.GREEN <Color: 0>
- __xor__(self, other)¶
Returns current flag binary xor’ed with other:
>>> purple ^ white <Color.GREEN: 2> >>> purple ^ Color.GREEN <Color.RED|GREEN|BLUE: 7>
- __invert__(self):
Returns all the flags in type(self) that are not in self:
>>> ~white <Color: 0> >>> ~purple <Color.GREEN: 2> >>> ~Color.RED <Color.GREEN|BLUE: 6>
- _numeric_repr_()¶
Function used to format any remaining unnamed numeric values. Default is the value’s repr; common choices are
hex()
andoct()
.
Changed in version 3.11: The repr() of zero-valued flags has changed. It is now::
>>> Color(0) <Color: 0>
- class enum.IntFlag¶
IntFlag is the same as Flag, but its members are also integers and can be used anywhere that an integer can be used.
>>> from enum import IntFlag, auto >>> class Color(IntFlag): ... RED = auto() ... GREEN = auto() ... BLUE = auto() >>> Color.RED & 2 <Color: 0> >>> Color.RED | 2 <Color.RED|GREEN: 3>
If any integer operation is performed with an IntFlag member, the result is not an IntFlag:
>>> Color.RED + 2 3
If a Flag operation is performed with an IntFlag member and:
the result is a valid IntFlag: an IntFlag is returned
the result is not a valid IntFlag: the result depends on the FlagBoundary setting
The repr() of unnamed zero-valued flags has changed. It is now:
>>> Color(0) <Color: 0>
Changed in version 3.11:
__str__()
is nowint.__str__()
to better support the replacement of existing constants use-case.__format__()
was alreadyint.__format__()
for that same reason.Inversion of an
IntFlag
now returns a positive value that is the union of all flags not in the given flag, rather than a negative value. This matches the existingFlag
behavior.
- class enum.ReprEnum¶
ReprEnum
uses therepr()
ofEnum
, but thestr()
of the mixed-in data type:Inherit from
ReprEnum
to keep thestr()
/format()
of the mixed-in data type instead of using theEnum
-defaultstr()
.New in version 3.11.
- class enum.EnumCheck¶
EnumCheck contains the options used by the
verify()
decorator to ensure various constraints; failed constraints result in aValueError
.- UNIQUE¶
Ensure that each value has only one name:
>>> from enum import Enum, verify, UNIQUE >>> @verify(UNIQUE) ... class Color(Enum): ... RED = 1 ... GREEN = 2 ... BLUE = 3 ... CRIMSON = 1 Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: aliases found in <enum 'Color'>: CRIMSON -> RED
- CONTINUOUS¶
Ensure that there are no missing values between the lowest-valued member and the highest-valued member:
>>> from enum import Enum, verify, CONTINUOUS >>> @verify(CONTINUOUS) ... class Color(Enum): ... RED = 1 ... GREEN = 2 ... BLUE = 5 Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: invalid enum 'Color': missing values 3, 4
- NAMED_FLAGS¶
Ensure that any flag groups/masks contain only named flags – useful when values are specified instead of being generated by
auto()
:>>> from enum import Flag, verify, NAMED_FLAGS >>> @verify(NAMED_FLAGS) ... class Color(Flag): ... RED = 1 ... GREEN = 2 ... BLUE = 4 ... WHITE = 15 ... NEON = 31 Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: invalid Flag 'Color': aliases WHITE and NEON are missing combined values of 0x18 [use enum.show_flag_values(value) for details]
Note
CONTINUOUS and NAMED_FLAGS are designed to work with integer-valued members.
New in version 3.11.
- class enum.FlagBoundary¶
FlagBoundary controls how out-of-range values are handled in Flag and its subclasses.
- STRICT¶
Out-of-range values cause a
ValueError
to be raised. This is the default forFlag
:>>> from enum import Flag, STRICT >>> class StrictFlag(Flag, boundary=STRICT): ... RED = auto() ... GREEN = auto() ... BLUE = auto() >>> StrictFlag(2**2 + 2**4) Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: <flag 'StrictFlag'> invalid value 20 given 0b0 10100 allowed 0b0 00111
- CONFORM¶
Out-of-range values have invalid values removed, leaving a valid Flag value:
>>> from enum import Flag, CONFORM >>> class ConformFlag(Flag, boundary=CONFORM): ... RED = auto() ... GREEN = auto() ... BLUE = auto() >>> ConformFlag(2**2 + 2**4) <ConformFlag.BLUE: 4>
- EJECT¶
Out-of-range values lose their Flag membership and revert to
int
. This is the default forIntFlag
:>>> from enum import Flag, EJECT >>> class EjectFlag(Flag, boundary=EJECT): ... RED = auto() ... GREEN = auto() ... BLUE = auto() >>> EjectFlag(2**2 + 2**4) 20
- KEEP¶
Out-of-range values are kept, and the Flag membership is kept. This is used for some stdlib flags:
>>> from enum import Flag, KEEP >>> class KeepFlag(Flag, boundary=KEEP): ... RED = auto() ... GREEN = auto() ... BLUE = auto() >>> KeepFlag(2**2 + 2**4) <KeepFlag.BLUE|16: 20>
New in version 3.11.
Supported __dunder__
names¶
__members__
is a read-only ordered mapping of member_name
:member
items. It is only available on the class.
__new__()
, if specified, must create and return the enum members; it is
also a very good idea to set the member’s _value_
appropriately. Once
all the members are created it is no longer used.
Supported _sunder_
names¶
_name_
– name of the member_value_
– value of the member; can be set / modified in__new__
_missing_
– a lookup function used when a value is not found; may be overridden_ignore_
– a list of names, either as alist
or astr
, that will not be transformed into members, and will be removed from the final class_order_
– used in Python 2/3 code to ensure member order is consistent (class attribute, removed during class creation)_generate_next_value_
– used to get an appropriate value for an enum member; may be overridden
New in version 3.6: _missing_
, _order_
, _generate_next_value_
New in version 3.7: _ignore_
Utilities and Decorators¶
- class enum.auto¶
auto can be used in place of a value. If used, the Enum machinery will call an Enum’s
_generate_next_value_()
to get an appropriate value. For Enum and IntEnum that appropriate value will be the last value plus one; for Flag and IntFlag it will be the first power-of-two greater than the highest value; for StrEnum it will be the lower-cased version of the member’s name. Care must be taken if mixing auto() with manually specified values.auto instances are only resolved when at the top level of an assignment:
FIRST = auto()
will work (auto() is replaced with1
);SECOND = auto(), -2
will work (auto is replaced with2
, so2, -2
isused to create the
SECOND
enum member;
THREE = [auto(), -3]
will not work (<auto instance>, -3
is used to create theTHREE
enum member)
Changed in version 3.11.1: In prior versions,
auto()
had to be the only thing on the assignment line to work properly._generate_next_value_
can be overridden to customize the values used by auto.Note
in 3.13 the default
_generate_next_value_
will always return the highest member value incremented by 1, and will fail if any member is an incompatible type.
- @enum.property¶
A decorator similar to the built-in property, but specifically for enumerations. It allows member attributes to have the same names as members themselves.
Note
the property and the member must be defined in separate classes; for example, the value and name attributes are defined in the Enum class, and Enum subclasses can define members with the names
value
andname
.New in version 3.11.
- @enum.unique¶
A
class
decorator specifically for enumerations. It searches an enumeration’s__members__
, gathering any aliases it finds; if any are foundValueError
is raised with the details:>>> from enum import Enum, unique >>> @unique ... class Mistake(Enum): ... ONE = 1 ... TWO = 2 ... THREE = 3 ... FOUR = 3 ... Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: duplicate values found in <enum 'Mistake'>: FOUR -> THREE
- @enum.verify¶
A
class
decorator specifically for enumerations. Members fromEnumCheck
are used to specify which constraints should be checked on the decorated enumeration.New in version 3.11.
- @enum.member¶
A decorator for use in enums: its target will become a member.
New in version 3.11.
- @enum.nonmember¶
A decorator for use in enums: its target will not become a member.
New in version 3.11.
- @enum.global_enum¶
A decorator to change the
str()
andrepr()
of an enum to show its members as belonging to the module instead of its class. Should only be used when the enum members are exported to the module global namespace (seere.RegexFlag
for an example).New in version 3.11.
- enum.show_flag_values(value)¶
Return a list of all power-of-two integers contained in a flag value.
New in version 3.11.
Notes¶
These three enum types are designed to be drop-in replacements for existing integer- and string-based values; as such, they have extra limitations:
__str__
uses the value and not the name of the enum member
__format__
, because it uses__str__
, will also use the value of the enum member instead of its nameIf you do not need/want those limitations, you can either create your own base class by mixing in the
int
orstr
type yourself:>>> from enum import Enum >>> class MyIntEnum(int, Enum): ... passor you can reassign the appropriate
str()
, etc., in your enum:>>> from enum import Enum, IntEnum >>> class MyIntEnum(IntEnum): ... __str__ = Enum.__str__