Which is better in python, del or delattr?

若如初见. 提交于 2019-11-28 15:21:39

The first is more efficient than the second. del foo.bar compiles to two bytecode instructions:

  2           0 LOAD_FAST                0 (foo)
              3 DELETE_ATTR              0 (bar)

whereas delattr(foo, "bar") takes five:

  2           0 LOAD_GLOBAL              0 (delattr)
              3 LOAD_FAST                0 (foo)
              6 LOAD_CONST               1 ('bar')
              9 CALL_FUNCTION            2
             12 POP_TOP             

This translates into the first running slightly faster (but it's not a huge difference – .15 μs on my machine).

Like the others have said, you should really only use the second form when the attribute that you're deleting is determined dynamically.

[Edited to show the bytecode instructions generated inside a function, where the compiler can use LOAD_FAST and LOAD_GLOBAL]

  • del is more explicit and efficient;
  • delattr allows dynamic attribute deleting.

Consider the following examples:

for name in ATTRIBUTES:
    delattr(obj, name)

or:

def _cleanup(self, name):
    """Do cleanup for an attribute"""
    value = getattr(self, name)
    self._pre_cleanup(name, value)
    delattr(self, name)
    self._post_cleanup(name, value)

You can't do it with del.

Alex Gaynor

Unquestionably the former. In my view this is like asking whether foo.bar is better than getattr(foo, "bar"), and I don't think anyone is asking that question :)

It's really a matter of preference, but the first is probably preferable. I'd only use the second one if you don't know the name of the attribute that you're deleting ahead of time.

Just like getattr and setattr, delattr should only be used when the attribute name is unknown.

In that sense, it's roughly equivalent to several python features that are used to access built-in functionality at a lower level than you normally have available, such as __import__ instead of import and operator.add instead of +

Not sure about the inner workings, but from a code reusability and don't be a jerk coworker perspective, use del. It's more clear and understood by people coming from other languages as well.

If you think delattr is more explicit, then why not used getattr all the time rather than object.attr?

As for under the hood... your guess is as good as mine. If not significantly better.

It is an old question, but I would like to put my 2 cents in.

Though, del foo.bar is more elegant, at times you will need delattr(foo, "bar"). Say, if you have an interactive command line interface that allows a user to dynamically delete any member in the object by typing the name, then you have no choice but to use the latter form.

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