Hello,

This is my first post here so please gently inform me of any etiquette breaches.

I'm seeing a behaviour I can't explain with Python 3.4.1 when I call a function via a reference stored in an object.

When I assign the reference as a class variable, the reference has __self__ set, too, so I get an extra argument passed to the function. If I assign the reference as an instance variable, then __self__ is unset so no extra argument.

Here's what I mean:

def print_args(*args):
        print(args)
        
class C:
        ref = None
        
C.ref = print_args    # assign to class variable
i = C()
i.ref()     # call via class variable - get a 'self' argument passed
(<__main__.C object at 0x1071a05f8>,)
i.ref = print_args   # assign to instance variable
i.ref()     # call via instance variable: no arguments
()

If you look at i.ref.__self__ for the two cases, you'll see what's going on. I've tried RTFMing but can't find the reason for the two behaviours. Could someone provide an explanation for me, please?

Thanks,

Greg


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