I often find myself overwriting methods of a parent class, and can never decide if I should explicitly list given parameters or just use a blanket *args, **kwargs
In addition to the other answers:
Having variable arguments may "decouple" the parent from the child, but creates a coupling between the object created and the parent, which I think is worse, because now you created a "long distance" couple (more difficult to spot, more difficult to maintain, because you may create several objects in your application)
If you're looking for decoupling, take a look at composition over inheritance
I prefer explicit arguments because auto complete allows you to see the method signature of the function while making the function call.
My choice would be:
class Child(Parent):
def save(self, commit=True, **kwargs):
super(Child, self).save(commit, **kwargs)
# more logic
It avoids accessing commit argument from *args
and **kwargs
and it keeps things safe if the signature of Parent:save
changes (for example adding a new default argument).
Update : In this case, having the *args can cause troubles if a new positional argument is added to the parent. I would keep only **kwargs
and manage only new arguments with default values. It would avoid errors to propagate.
Not really an answer but more a side note: If you really, really want to make sure the default values for the parent class are propagated to the child classes you can do something like:
class Parent(object):
default_save_commit=True
def save(self, commit=default_save_commit):
# ...
class Derived(Parent):
def save(self, commit=Parent.default_save_commit):
super(Derived, self).save(commit=commit)
However I have to admit this looks quite ugly and I would only use it if I feel I really need it.
Liskov Substitution Principle
Generally you don't want you method signature to vary in derived types. This can cause problems if you want to swap the use of derived types. This is often referred to as the Liskov Substitution Principle.
Benefits of Explicit Signatures
At the same time I don't think it's correct for all your methods to have a signature of *args
, **kwargs
. Explicit signatures:
Variable Length Arguments and Coupling
Do not mistake variable length arguments for good coupling practice. There should be a certain amount of cohesion between a parent class and derived classes otherwise they wouldn't be related to each other. It is normal for related code to result in coupling that reflects the level of cohesion.
Places To Use Variable Length Arguments
Use of variable length arguments shouldn't be your first option. It should be used when you have a good reason like:
Are You Doing Something Wrong?
If you find you are often creating methods which take many arguments or derived methods with different signatures you may have a bigger issue in how you're organizing your code.
If you are certain that Child will keep the signature, surely the explicit approach is preferable, but when Child will change the signature I personally prefer to use both approaches:
class Parent(object):
def do_stuff(self, a, b):
# some logic
class Child(Parent):
def do_stuff(self, c, *args, **kwargs):
super(Child, self).do_stuff(*args, **kwargs)
# some logic with c
This way, changes in the signature are quite readable in Child, while the original signature is quite readable in Parent.
In my opinion this is also the better way when you have multiple inheritance, because calling super
a few times is quite disgusting when you don't have args and kwargs.
For what it's worth, this is also the preferred way in quite a few Python libs and frameworks (Django, Tornado, Requests, Markdown, to name a few). Although one should not base his choices on such things, I'm merely implying that this approach is quite widespread.