__del__ method being called in python when it is not expected

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予麋鹿
予麋鹿 2020-12-11 05:16

I am new to python and have been working through the examples in Swaroop CH\'s \"A Byte of Python\". I am seeing some behavior with the __del__ method that is

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  • 2020-12-11 05:56

    There are a couple of things going on here. When your Person4 class is instantiated, it initialises its population class variable to 0. From your interactive console, you appear to be running your "test1.py" file multiple times. The second time you run it, the Person4 class is declared again which makes it technically different from the first one (even though it has the same name). That means it has its own independent population count.

    Now, swaroop and kaleem are global variables, shared between both your instances of "test1.py". Python internally uses reference counting for most of its automatic garbage collection, so the original instance of the first Person4 class is not released until the second assignment to swaroop. Assigning to swaroop decrements the reference count for the first instance, causing __del__ to be called because the reference count is now zero. But because you're referring to Person4 by name inside __del__(), when the previous instance disappears it decrements the new Person4.population count, instead of the old Person4 population count.

    Hopefully that made sense. I can see why this might be confusing to somebody learning Python. Your use of class variables at the same time as redefining the Person4 class using execfile() is further confusing matters. For what it's worth, I've written a lot of Python code and I don't think I've ever needed to use the __del__ special method.

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  • 2020-12-11 06:01

    General advice: don't use __ del __ in Python. It can break garbage collection in a number of ways, esp. in the case of circular references between objects.

    In your example, there're various issues related to the usage of execfile() - which is not a best practice - and the redefinition of global variables. By the way, if you really need to create a pseudo-destructor (i.e. a code that is invoked whenever the object gets garbage collected), write a so-called "finalizer" function (it's not properly a destructor) and invoke it using weakref.ref callback. It should NOT be an instance method of course, and remember that lambda actually creates a closure, hence be sure not to leak any reference to self in the callback! If you need data from the destroyed instance, use the func default argument approach, just be sure never to reference 'self' inside the lambda, otherwise it won't work.

    from weakref import ref
    from time import sleep
    
    class Person4:
        '''Represents a person'''
        population = 0
    
        def __init__(self, name):
            '''Initialize the person's data'''
            self.name = name
            print 'Initializing %s'% self.name
    
            #When the person is created they increase the population
            Person4.population += 1
    
            self._wr = ref(self, lambda wr, name=self.name: Person4_finalizer(name))
    
    def Person4_finalizer(name):
            '''I am dying'''
            print '%s says bye' % name
    
            Person4.population -= 1
    
            if Person4.population == 0:
                print 'I am the last one'
            else:
                print 'There are still %d left' % Person4.population
    
    p1 = Person4("one")
    p2 = Person4("two")
    p3 = Person4("three")
    
    del p2
    del p3
    sleep(5)
    

    output (the sleep is there to help see what's happening):

    Initializing one
    Initializing two
    Initializing three
    two says bye
    There are still 2 left
    three says bye
    There are still 1 left
    one says bye
    I am the last one
    
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