Here’s how I would do this:
class ClassPropertyDescriptor(object): def __init__(self, fget, fset=None): self.fget = fget self.fset = fset def __get__(self, obj, klass=None): if klass is None: klass = type(obj) return self.fget.__get__(obj, klass)() def __set__(self, obj, value): if not self.fset: raise AttributeError("can't set attribute") type_ = type(obj) return self.fset.__get__(obj, type_)(value) def setter(self, func): if not isinstance(func, (classmethod, staticmethod)): func = classmethod(func) self.fset = func return self def classproperty(func): if not isinstance(func, (classmethod, staticmethod)): func = classmethod(func) return ClassPropertyDescriptor(func) class Bar(object): _bar = 1 @classproperty def bar(cls): return cls._bar @bar.setter def bar(cls, value): cls._bar = value # test instance instantiation foo = Bar() assert foo.bar == 1 baz = Bar() assert baz.bar == 1 # test static variable baz.bar = 5 assert foo.bar == 5 # test setting variable on the class Bar.bar = 50 assert baz.bar == 50 assert foo.bar == 50
The setter didn’t work at the time we call Bar.bar
, because we are calling TypeOfBar.bar.__set__
, which is not Bar.bar.__set__
.
Adding a metaclass definition solves this:
class ClassPropertyMetaClass(type): def __setattr__(self, key, value): if key in self.__dict__: obj = self.__dict__.get(key) if obj and type(obj) is ClassPropertyDescriptor: return obj.__set__(self, value) return super(ClassPropertyMetaClass, self).__setattr__(key, value) # and update class define: # class Bar(object): # __metaclass__ = ClassPropertyMetaClass # _bar = 1 # and update ClassPropertyDescriptor.__set__ # def __set__(self, obj, value): # if not self.fset: # raise AttributeError("can't set attribute") # if inspect.isclass(obj): # type_ = obj # obj = None # else: # type_ = type(obj) # return self.fset.__get__(obj, type_)(value)