问题
I know that you can't call object.__setattr__ on objects not inherited from object, but is there anything else that is different between the two? I'm working in Python 2.6, if this matters.
回答1:
Reading this question again I misunderstood what @paper.cut was asking about: the difference between classic classes and new-style classes (not an issue in Python 3+). I do not know the answer to that.
Original Answer*
setattr(instance, name, value) is syntactic sugar for instance.__setattr__(name, value)**.
You would only need to call object.__setattr__(...) inside a class definition, and then only if directly subclassing object -- if you were subclassing something else, Spam for example, then you should either use super() to get the next item in the heirarchy, or call Spam.__setattr__(...) -- this way you don't risk missing behavior that super-classes have defined by skipping over them directly to object.
* applies to Python 3.0+ classes and 2.x new-style classes
**There are two instances where setattr(x, ...) and x.__setattr__(...) are not the same:
xitself has a__setattr__in it's private dictionary (sox.__dict__[__setattr__] = ...(this is almost certainly an error)x.__class__has a__getattribute__method -- because__getattribute__intercepts every lookup, even when the method/attribute exists
NB These two caveats apply to every syntactic sugar shortcut:
setattrgetattrlenboolhash- etc
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7559170/whats-the-difference-between-setattr-and-object-setattr