Single underscore at the beginning:
Python doesn't have real private methods. Instead, one underscore at the start of a method or attribute name means you shouldn't access this method, because it's not part of the API.
class BaseForm(StrAndUnicode):
def _get_errors(self):
"Returns an ErrorDict for the data provided for the form"
if self._errors is None:
self.full_clean()
return self._errors
errors = property(_get_errors)
(This code snippet was taken from django source code: django/forms/forms.py). In this code, errors
is a public property, but the method this property calls, _get_errors, is "private", so you shouldn't access it.
Two underscores at the beginning:
This causes a lot of confusion. It should not be used to create a private method. It should be used to avoid your method being overridden by a subclass or accessed accidentally. Let's see an example:
class A(object):
def __test(self):
print "I'm a test method in class A"
def test(self):
self.__test()
a = A()
a.test()
# a.__test() # This fails with an AttributeError
a._A__test() # Works! We can access the mangled name directly!
Output:
$ python test.py
I'm test method in class A
I'm test method in class A
Now create a subclass B and do customization for __test method
class B(A):
def __test(self):
print "I'm test method in class B"
b = B()
b.test()
Output will be....
$ python test.py
I'm test method in class A
As we have seen, A.test() didn't call B.__test() methods, as we might expect. But in fact, this is the correct behavior for __. The two methods called __test() are automatically renamed (mangled) to _A__test() and _B__test(), so they do not accidentally override. When you create a method starting with __ it means that you don't want to anyone to be able to override it, and you only intend to access it from inside its own class.
Two underscores at the beginning and at the end:
When we see a method like __this__
, don't call it. This is a method which python is meant to call, not you. Let's take a look:
>>> name = "test string"
>>> name.__len__()
11
>>> len(name)
11
>>> number = 10
>>> number.__add__(40)
50
>>> number + 50
60
There is always an operator or native function which calls these magic methods. Sometimes it's just a hook python calls in specific situations. For example __init__()
is called when the object is created after __new__()
is called to build the instance...
Let's take an example...
class FalseCalculator(object):
def __init__(self, number):
self.number = number
def __add__(self, number):
return self.number - number
def __sub__(self, number):
return self.number + number
number = FalseCalculator(20)
print number + 10 # 10
print number - 20 # 40
For more details, see the PEP-8 guide. For more magic methods, see this PDF.