You can feign immutablility on class attributes by playing with __setattr__. I don’t remember the exact way to do it, but its roughly like this:
class YourClass:
def __setattr__(self, name, value):
if not hasattr(self, name):
super().__setattr__(name, value)
else:
# handle as you wish if the
# attr/value already exists.
# pass, raise, whatever
I say “feign immutability” because there are still cases in which an attr value can change, such as:
the underlying attribute contains a list and appending to the list
the underlying attribute is a class and modifying the class’s attributes
pretty much anything that does “in place” changes, because so much of python is referential and has side effects.
You can feign immutablility on class attributes by playing with
__setattr__
. I don’t remember the exact way to do it, but its roughly like this:I say “feign immutability” because there are still cases in which an attr value can change, such as:
I have to mention
dataclasses
here, especially withfrozen=True
.Seriously, use dataclasses whenever possible, they’re great.