Couple weeks ago I learned about dataclasses
feature in Python. This feature is a nice way to define classes in python. This was introduced in Python 3.7, in particular PEP 557. To use this feature make sure you are running python version 3.7 or above.
Previously, I knew about defining new classes in python using the self.__init__()
function. Here's an example of me defining a class Youtuber
.
class Youtuber:
def __init__(self, name: str, categories: list[str]):
self.name = name
self.categories = categories
Now we can use less boilerplate code to define classes. There is no need to install a separate python library, this will come with python standard library (as long as it's > 3.7).
Here's how you can define these now:
from dataclasses import dataclass
@dataclass
class Youtuber:
"""Class for defining youtubers."""
name: str
categories: list[str]
In this example above, I am importing it first from dataclasses import dataclass
and then defining it. I created a class definition and used @dataclass
annotation to tell python how it should interpret this class definition.
Then I can create this in python, as I would do it anyway, regardless of using @dataclass
:
Youtuber("Chris Stuckmann", ["movie-reviews"])
Here's how you can try this out, using 3 of my favorite youtube channels :)
youtubers = []
youtubers.append(Youtuber("Chris Stuckmann", ["movie-reviews"]))
youtubers.append(Youtuber("Double Toasted", ["movie-reviews"]))
youtubers.append(Youtuber("The Fitness Marshall", ["fitness"]))
for youtuber in youtubers:
print(f"{youtuber.name}'s categories are: {youtuber.categories}")
Let's put this all together in a file called youtubers.py
and run it! You can copy it from this GitHub gist I created. You should get this output:
$ python youtubers.py
Chris Stuckmann's categories are: ['movie-reviews']
Double Toasted's categories are: ['movie-reviews']
The Fitness Marshall's categories are: ['fitness']
Hope you enjoyed this short article!
You can find me on https://isabelcosta.github.io/