So I am stuck on a problem. I have a class which I want to use to create another class without having to go through the boiler plate of subclassing. Specifically because the subclass needs to have certain class attributes and I would like to control how those are passed to provide defaults and such. What I have working right now is
class Foo(): @classmethod def method_a(cls): print(cls.name) Bar = type('Bar', (Foo,), {'name': 'test1'}) Bar.method_a() This is sort of fine but the user needs to know how to call type and include all the base classes etc. I could just wrap the type call in a function like below def BarMaker(name): return type('Bar', (Foo,), {'name': name}) But then if the user needs to actually subclass Foo, to add additional methods that is more difficult. Of course those methods could be added as part of the third argument to types but that just doesn't feel very Python. This is all complicated by the fact that I am trying to avoid actually instancating any of these classes because their purpose is to be passed off to another framework to be executed. In real life most of the classes would fail to instantiate because they are relying on pieces of the framework that won't be up and running when this setup is happening. The solution I am hoping for is something like Foo(name, **kwds) -> Returns new class type of name For example test = Foo('test') So that then optionally a user could do class UserClass(Foo): def new_method(): pass bar = UserClass('Bar') Or something similar. Since I have a working example with type I feel like there should be a way to do this with the normal class structure but I am at a loss for how I have messed with the __new__ and __prepare__ methods and I can't seem to make anything work and the examples of meta classes don't clearly show how to convert my type example to a class structure. Is what I want to do possible? Chris -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list